Outcome prediction of advanced mantle cell lymphoma by international prognostic index versus different mantle cell lymphoma indexes: one institution study
MEDICAL ONCOLOGY
Authors: Todorovic, Milena; Balint, Bela; Andjelic, Bosko; Stanisavljevic, Dejana; Kurtovic, Nada Kraguljac; Radisavljevic, Ziv; Mihaljevic, Biljana
Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic significance of international prognostic index (IPI), mantle cell lymphoma IPI (MIPI), simplified MIPI (sMIPI), and MIPI biological (MIPIb), as well as their correlation with immunophenotype, clinical characteristics, and overall survival (OS), in a selected group of 54 patients with advanced-stage mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), treated uniformly with CHOP. Seventeen patients had IV clinical stage (CS), while other 37 had leukemic phase at presentation. Diffuse type of marrow infiltration was verified in 68.5% and nodular in remainder patients. Extranodal localization (25.9%) included bowel (20.4%), pleural effusion, sinus, and palpebral infiltration. All of analyzed patients expressed typical MCL immunophenotypic profile: CD19(+)CD20(+)CD22(+)CD5(+)Cyclin-D1(+)FMC7(+)CD79b(+)smIg(+)CD38(+/-)CD23(-)CD10(-). Median OS of the whole group was 23 months, without significant differences between IV CS and leukemic phase patients. Thirty-two patients (59.3%) responded to initial treatment, 9 (16.7%) with complete and 23 (42.6%) with partial remission. Negative prognostic influence on OS had high IPI (P < 0.01), high sMIPI (P < 0.001), MIPI (P < 0.01), MIPIb (P < 0.01), extranodal localization (P < 0.01), and diffuse marrow infiltration (P < 0.01). Testing between randomly selected groups showed that patients with lower proportion of CD5(+) cells (<80%) correlated with cytological blastoid variant and had shorter survival comparing with the group with higher proportion of CD5(+) cells (>80%) (P < 0.01). Using univariate Cox regression, we proved that IPI, sMIPI, MIPI, and MIPIb had an independent predictive importance (P < 0.01) for OS in uniformly treated advanced MCL patients, although sMIPI prognostic significance was the highest (P < 0.001).
Analysis of Driver Mutational Hot Spots in Blood-Derived Cell-Free DNA of Patients with Primary Central Nervous System Lymphoma Obtained before Intracerebral Biopsy
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTICS
Authors: Montesinos-Rongen, Manuel; Brunn, Anna; Tuchscherer, Armin; Borchmann, Peter; Schorb, Elisabeth; Kasenda, Benjamin; Altmueller, Janine; Illerhaus, Gerald; Ruge, Maximilian, I; Maarouf, Mohammad; Buettner, Reinhard; Hansmann, Martin-Leo; Hallek, Michael; Prinz, Marco; Siebert, Reiner; Deckert, Martina
Abstract
In newly diagnosed systemic diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, next-generation sequencing of plasma-derived cell-free DNA (cfDNA) detects somatic mutations as accurate as genotyping of the tumor biopsy. A distinct diffuse large B-cell lymphoma entity confined to the central nervous system is primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL), which requires intracerebral biopsy and neuropathologic analysis to establish the diagnosis. So far, a biomarker for diagnosis and follow-up of PCNSL that can be investigated in blood has not been identified. This article addresses the question whether somatic mutations of the CD798 and MYD88 driver genes of PCNSL can be detected in cfDNA at disease diagnosis. Stereotactic biopsies and cfDNA of 27 PCNSL patients were analyzed for CD79B and MYD88 mutations. As control, cfDNA derived from six healthy volunteers was used. CD79B and MYD88 hot spot mutations were identified in 16 of 27 (59%) and 23 of 27 (85%) PCNSL biopsies, respectively, but only in 0 of 27 (0%) and 1 of 27 (4%) corresponding cfDNA samples, respectively. In cfDNA of one of four patients with Waldenstrom disease, as a further control, the MYD88 L265P mutation was readily detected, despite complete clinical remission. These data suggest that in PCNSL even if they carry such mutations, alterations of CD79B and MYD88 cannot be reliably detected in blood-derived cfDNA obtained before intracerebral biopsy.