Haematologica (Sep 2016)

Detection and prognostic value of recurrent exportin 1 mutations in tumor and cell-free circulating DNA of patients with classical Hodgkin lymphoma

  • Vincent Camus,
  • Aspasia Stamatoullas,
  • Sylvain Mareschal,
  • Pierre-Julien Viailly,
  • Nasrin Sarafan-Vasseur,
  • Elodie Bohers,
  • Sydney Dubois,
  • Jean Michel Picquenot,
  • Philippe Ruminy,
  • Catherine Maingonnat,
  • Philippe Bertrand,
  • Marie Cornic,
  • Valérie Tallon-Simon,
  • Stéphanie Becker,
  • Liana Veresezan,
  • Thierry Frebourg,
  • Pierre Vera,
  • Christian Bastard,
  • Hervé Tilly,
  • Fabrice Jardin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2016.145102
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 101, no. 9

Abstract

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Classical Hodgkin lymphoma is one of the most common lymphomas and shares clinical and genetic features with primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma. In this retrospective study, we analyzed the recurrent hotspot mutation of the exportin 1 (XPO1, p.E571K) gene, previously identified in primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma, in biopsies and plasma circulating cell-free DNA from patients with classical Hodgkin lymphoma using a highly sensitive digital PCR technique. A total of 94 patients were included in the present study. This widely expressed XPO1 E571K mutation is present in one quarter of classical Hodgkin lymphoma patients (24.2%). Mutated and wild-type classical Hodgkin lymphomas were similar regarding the main clinical features. Patients with a detectable XPO1 mutation at the end of treatment displayed a tendency toward shorter progression-free survival, as compared to patients with undetectable mutation in plasma cell-free DNA (2-year progression-free survival: 57.1%, 95% confidence interval: 30.1–100% versus 2-year progression-free survival: 90.5%, 95% confidence interval: 78.8–100%, respectively, P=0.0601). To conclude, the detection of the XPO1 E571K mutation in biopsy and plasma cell-free DNA by digital PCR may be used as a novel biomarker in classical Hodgkin lymphoma for both diagnosis and minimal residual disease, and pinpoints a crucial role of XPO1 in classical Hodgkin lymphoma pathogenesis. The detection of somatic mutation in the plasma cell-free DNA of patients represents a major technological advance in the context of liquid biopsies and noninvasive management of classical Hodgkin lymphoma.