Blood Advances (Apr 2025)

Molecular clustering on ctDNA improves the prognostic stratification of patients with DLBCL compared with ctDNA levels

  • Riccardo Moia,
  • Donatella Talotta,
  • Lodovico Terzi Di Bergamo,
  • Mohammad Almasri,
  • Riccardo Dondolin,
  • Matin Salehi,
  • Chiara Cosentino,
  • Roberta Soscia,
  • Irene Della Starza,
  • Alessio Bruscaggin,
  • Annalisa Andorno,
  • Francesca Mercalli,
  • Stefania Cresta,
  • Riccardo Bomben,
  • Tamara Bittolo,
  • Filippo Vit,
  • Pietro Bulian,
  • Antonella Zucchetto,
  • Riccardo Bruna,
  • Giulia Maria Rivolta,
  • Mattia Schipani,
  • Eleonora Secomandi,
  • Sreekar Kogila,
  • Matteo Bellia,
  • Samir Mouhssine,
  • Jana Nabki,
  • Bashar Al Deeban,
  • Joseph Ghanej,
  • Luca Cividini,
  • Nawar Maher,
  • Federica Melle,
  • Giovanna Motta,
  • Monica Leutner,
  • Angela Lorenzi,
  • Abdurraouf Mokhtar Mahmoud,
  • Wael Al Essa,
  • Clara Deambrogi,
  • Silvia Rasi,
  • Luigi Petrucci,
  • Renzo Luciano Boldorini,
  • Alice Di Rocco,
  • Ilaria Del Giudice,
  • Michele Spina,
  • Stefano Palazzolo,
  • Fabio Canal,
  • Vincenzo Canzonieri,
  • Maurizio Martelli,
  • Stefano Pileri,
  • Valter Gattei,
  • Robin Foà,
  • Davide Rossi,
  • Gianluca Gaidano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2024014136
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 7
pp. 1692 – 1701

Abstract

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Abstract: Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) levels can help predict outcomes in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), but its integration with DLBCL molecular clusters remains unexplored. Using the LymphGen tool in 77 DLBCL cases with both ctDNA and tissue biopsy, a 95.8% concordance rate in molecular cluster assignment was observed, showing the reproducibility of molecular clustering on ctDNA. A multicenter, prospective cohort of 166 patients with newly diagnosed DLBCL was analyzed for ctDNA levels and molecular clusters using cancer personalized profiling by deep sequencing. Patients with ctDNA levels of <2.5 log10 haploid genome equivalents (hGE)/mL had a 4-year progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) of 71.7% and 85.7%, respectively, compared with 50.3% and 61.0% for those with higher ctDNA levels (P = .0018 and P = .0017). Recursive partitioning showed that patients with ctDNA levels of ≥2.5 log10 hGE/mL were further stratified by clusters ST2/BN2. In this group, ST2/BN2 patients associated with a favorable outcome with a 4-year PFS and OS of 87.5% and 100%, respectively, compared to 38.0% and 47.1% for other clusters (P = .003 and P = .001). Combining ctDNA levels and ST2/BN2 clusters improved outcome prediction. Low-risk patients (n = 51), characterized by ctDNA levels of <2.5 log10 hGE/mL and/or BN2/ST2 cluster, had a 4-year PFS and OS of 75.3% and 87.8%, respectively. High-risk patients (n = 115), with ctDNA levels of ≥2.5 log10 hGE/mL and no BN2/ST2 cluster, had a 4-year PFS and OS of 38.0% and 47.1%, respectively. Adding cluster assignment to ctDNA levels improved the model’s C statistics (0.63 vs 0.59 for PFS; 0.68 vs 0.63 for OS). Liquid biopsy thus provides a multilayered approach for outcome prediction in DLBCL.