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A CpG island methylator phenotype in acute myeloid leukemia independent of IDH mutations and associated with a favorable outcome

Genetic changes are infrequent in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) compared to other malignancies and often involve epigenetic regulators, suggesting that an altered epigenome may underlie AML biology and outcomes. In 96 AML cases including 65 pilot samples selected for cured/not-cured, we found higher...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kelly, Andrew D., Kroeger, Heike, Yamazaki, Jumpei, Taby, Rodolphe, Neumann, Frank, Yu, Sijia, Lee, Justin T., Patel, Bela, Li, Yuesheng, He, Rong, Liang, Shoudan, Lu, Yue, Cesaroni, Matteo, Pierce, Sherry A., Kornblau, Steven M., Bueso-Ramos, Carlos E., Ravandi, Farhad, Kantarjian, Hagop M., Jelinek, Jaroslav, Issa, Jean-Pierre J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5537054/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28074068
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/leu.2017.12
Descripción
Sumario:Genetic changes are infrequent in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) compared to other malignancies and often involve epigenetic regulators, suggesting that an altered epigenome may underlie AML biology and outcomes. In 96 AML cases including 65 pilot samples selected for cured/not-cured, we found higher CpG island (CGI) promoter methylation in cured patients. Expanded genome-wide digital restriction enzyme analysis of methylation (DREAM) data revealed a CGI methylator phenotype independent of IDH1/2 mutations we term AML-CIMP (A-CIMP(+)). A-CIMP was associated with longer overall survival (OS) in this dataset (median OS, years: A-CIMP(+) = Not reached, A-CIMP(−) =1.17; P=0.08). For validation we used 194 samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas interrogated with Illumina 450k methylation arrays where we confirmed longer OS in A-CIMP (median OS, years: A-CIMP(+) =2.34, A-CIMP(−) =1.00; P=0.01). Hypermethylation in A-CIMP favored CGIs (OR: CGI/non-CGI=5.21), and while A-CIMP was enriched in CEBPA (P=0.002) and WT1 mutations (P=0.02), 70% of cases lacked either mutation. Hypermethylated genes in A-CIMP function in pluripotency maintenance, and a gene expression signature of A-CIMP was associated with outcomes in multiple datasets. We conclude that CIMP in AML cannot be explained solely by gene mutations (e.g. IDH1/2, TET2), and that curability in A-CIMP(+) AML should be validated prospectively.