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Myeloid NGS Analyses of Paired Samples from Bone Marrow and Peripheral Blood Yield Concordant Results: A Prospective Cohort Analysis of the AGMT Study Group

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Myelodysplastic neoplasms and acute myeloid leukemias are often caused by gene mutations. Next generation sequencing (NGS) has become indispensable for mutational assessment and is widely used for disease classification, risk stratification, prognostication, and disease monitoring. I...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jansko-Gadermeir, Bettina, Leisch, Michael, Gassner, Franz J., Zaborsky, Nadja, Dillinger, Thomas, Hutter, Sonja, Risch, Angela, Melchardt, Thomas, Egle, Alexander, Drost, Manuel, Larcher-Senn, Julian, Greil, Richard, Pleyer, Lisa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10136651/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37190237
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15082305
Descripción
Sumario:SIMPLE SUMMARY: Myelodysplastic neoplasms and acute myeloid leukemias are often caused by gene mutations. Next generation sequencing (NGS) has become indispensable for mutational assessment and is widely used for disease classification, risk stratification, prognostication, and disease monitoring. In these diseases, the bone marrow blast percentage and hence bone marrow specimen remain pre-requisite for the above. Several groups, including ours, report that bone marrow evaluations, which can be painful and time-consuming, are only performed in ~50% of patients during follow-up outside of clinical trials, indicating a clinical need for surrogate samples. We therefore aimed to compare NGS results for paired bone marrow and peripheral blood samples. Our results clearly show, in a prospective setting, that sequential molecular analyses of peripheral blood specimens can be reliably used to molecularly classify and monitor myeloid neoplasms without loss of sensitivity or specificity, even in the absence of circulating blasts or in neutropenic patients. Hence, a bone marrow evaluation for the purpose of monitoring of mutations is not necessary. ABSTRACT: Background: Next generation sequencing (NGS) has become indispensable for diagnosis, risk stratification, prognostication, and monitoring of response in patients with myeloid neoplasias. Guidelines require bone marrow evaluations for the above, which are often not performed outside of clinical trials, indicating a need for surrogate samples. Methods: Myeloid NGS analyses (40 genes and 29 fusion drivers) of 240 consecutive, non-selected, prospectively collected, paired bone marrow/peripheral blood samples were compared. Findings: Very strong correlation (r = 0.91, p < 0.0001), high concordance (99.6%), sensitivity (98.8%), specificity (99.9%), positive predictive value (99.8%), and negative predictive value (99.6%) between NGS analyses of paired samples was observed. A total of 9/1321 (0.68%) detected mutations were discordant, 8 of which had a variant allele frequency (VAF) ≤ 3.7%. VAFs between peripheral blood and bone marrow samples were very strongly correlated in the total cohort (r = 0.93, p = 0.0001) and in subgroups without circulating blasts (r = 0.92, p < 0.0001) or with neutropenia (r = 0.88, p < 0.0001). There was a weak correlation between the VAF of a detected mutation and the blast count in either the peripheral blood (r = 0.19) or the bone marrow (r = 0.11). Interpretation: Peripheral blood samples can be used to molecularly classify and monitor myeloid neoplasms via NGS without loss of sensitivity/specificity, even in the absence of circulating blasts or in neutropenic patients.