Abstract
Patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM) with high-risk disease are in need of new treatment strategies to improve the outcomes. Multiple clinical, cytogenetic, or gene expression features have been used to identify high-risk patients, each of which has significant weaknesses. Inclusion of molecular features into risk stratification could resolve the current challenges. In a genome-wide analysis of the largest set of molecular and clinical data established to date from NDMM, as part of the Myeloma Genome Project, we have defined DNA drivers of aggressive clinical behavior. Whole-genome and exome data from 1273 NDMM patients identified genetic factors that contribute significantly to progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) (cumulative R2 = 18.4% and 25.2%, respectively). Integrating DNA drivers and clinical data into a Cox model using 784 patients with ISS, age, PFS, OS, and genomic data, the model has a cumlative R2 of 34.3% for PFS and 46.5% for OS. A high-risk subgroup was defined by recursive partitioning using either a) bi-allelic TP53 inactivation or b) amplification (≥4 copies) of CKS1B (1q21) on the background of International Staging System III, comprising 6.1% of the population (median PFS = 15.4 months; OS = 20.7 months) that was validated in an independent dataset. Double-Hit patients have a dire prognosis despite modern therapies and should be considered for novel therapeutic approaches.
Highlights
IntroductionWe have made consistent therapeutic progress for patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM) over the
We have made consistent therapeutic progress for patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM) over theThese authors contributed : Brian A
Genome-wide analysis, we identified Double-Hit myeloma, a new, genomically defined high-risk group of patients with extremely poor outcome, despite treatment with novel therapies (18-month estimates of progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) are 39% and 48%, respectively)
Summary
We have made consistent therapeutic progress for patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM) over the. These authors jointly supervised this work: Nikhil Munshi, Anjan Thakurta, Gareth Morgan. * Gareth Morgan (CN) drivers, which can provide a global view of association with outcome. We focused the analysis on the key clinical problem of identifying high-risk patients destined for early relapse and death, where a change in treatment strategy could result in improved outcome
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