Abstract

Abstract Clinical practice guidelines recommend that individuals with HC MBL are evaluated annually for evidence of progression as it has been shown that they progress to develop CLL requiring therapy at a rate of 1-5%/year. Next-generation sequencing identified 59 genes recurrently mutated in CLL, and we previously showed that the tumor mutational load (TML), i.e., the total number of these genes mutated, is associated with a shorter time to first treatment (TTT) among 112 HC MBLs independent of the CLL international prognostic index (CLL-IPI), an established prognostic score. Herein, we continue to support our finding in additional HC MBLs and report the pooled results across the two cohorts. From the Mayo Clinic CLL Resource, we sequenced a total 167 HC MBL (112 from the initial round and 55 from additional sequencing). We extracted DNA from CD5+/CD19+ B-cells and sequenced the coding regions of 59 driver genes. Somatic mutations were called using MuTect2 in tumor-only mode. Germline variants were eliminated based on minor allele frequencies >0.01% and by those identified in public databases, unless present in known CLL mutation hotspots. After filtering, we computed the TML based on the number of genes with high impact (nonsense, frameshift and splicing) and hotspot mutations. Cox regression was used to estimate hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI), adjusted for sex and CLL-IPI. Stratified analyses were conducted by low/intermediate risk and high/very high CLL-IPI. Of the 167 HC MBL, low risk CLL-IPI comprised 60%, intermediate risk 28%, high risk 12%; and none were very-high risk. The most commonly mutated genes were SF3B1 (11%), NOTCH1 (9%), TP53 (7%), BIRC3 (7%), and MYD88 (6%); and 52 (31%) individuals had mutations in at least one gene. The median follow-up was 4.4 years, and 26 of the 167 individuals progressed to CLL requiring therapy. HC MBL with ≥2 mutated genes had a 28% 5-year risk of needing therapy compared to 6% among those with no mutated genes. Similar to our initial finding (HR=1.53, CI:1.12-2.07; P=0.007), we found a shorter TTT in the additional HC MBLs (HR=4.63, CI:1.57-13.7, P=0.006), and in the pooled cohort (HR=1.72; CI:1.29-2.28, P=0.0002). When we stratified by CLL-IPI risk, TML remained associated with TTT among individuals with low/intermediate CLL-IPI risk in the additional HC MBLs (HR=3.52, CI:1.11-11.2, P=0.03) and in the pooled cohort (HR=2.25, CI:1.34-3.77, P=0.002). A non-significant 2.8 fold association was observed with high risk CLL-IPI in the pooled cohort. In conclusion, the TML along with the CLL-IPI provide clinicians with a more accurate prognostic information regarding disease progression requiring therapy, especially for those MBLs with low to intermediate risk based on CLL-IPI. If validated, these findings may modify current practice guidelines for individuals with HC MBL. Citation Format: Geffen Kleinstern, Cecilia Bonolo de Campos, Nicholas J. Boddicker, Daniel R. O'Brien, Shulan Tian, Chantel Barney, Kari G. Rabe, Cristine Allmer, Laura Bruins, Aaron D. Norman, Timothy G. Call, Sameer A. Parikh, Jose F. Leis, Wei Ding, Huihuang Yan, James R. Cerhan, Neil E. Kay, Celine Vachon, Esteban Braggio, Susan L. Slager. Tumor mutational load derived from recurrently mutated genes in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) predicts time-to-first treatment in high-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis (HC MBL) [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr 884.

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