Abstract

In chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL), caution is warranted regarding the clinical implications of immunoglobulin variable heavy chain region (IGHV) rearrangements with a 'borderline' (BL) percentage of mutations (i.e. 97-97·9% IGHV identity). We analysed the IGHV mutational status in 759 untreated CLL patients (cohort 1). BL-CLL (n=36, 5%) showed a time to first treatment (TFT) similar to that of M-CLL (n=338) and significantly longer than that of UM-CLL (n=385), despite the enrichment in subset #2 cases. In fact, CLLs belonging to subset #2 (n=15/759, 2%) were significantly more frequent among BL-CLLs (n=5/36, 14%), with a brief TFT. TFT of BL-CLL remained comparable to that of M-CLL also considering the 327 CLL patients evaluated at diagnosis. These findings were then validated in an independent cohort 2 of 759 newly diagnosed CLL patients (BL-CLL: n=11, 1·4%) and in all newly diagnosed patients from cohorts 1 and 2 (n=1086, 84% stage A; BL-CLL: n=47, 4·3%). BL-CLL at diagnosis showed a biological profile comparable to that of M-CLL with a low frequency of unfavourable prognostic markers, except for a significant enrichment in subset #2. Our data suggest that the prognosis of BL-CLL is good and similar to that of M-CLL, with the exception of subset #2 cases.

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