International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Aug 2024)

Whole Exome Sequencing of Intermediate-Risk Acute Myeloid Leukemia without Recurrent Genetic Abnormalities Offers Deeper Insights into New Diagnostic Classifications

  • Francesca Guijarro,
  • Sandra Castaño-Díez,
  • Carlos Jiménez-Vicente,
  • Marta Garrote,
  • José Ramón Álamo,
  • Marta Gómez-Hernando,
  • Irene López-Oreja,
  • Jordi Morata,
  • Mònica López-Guerra,
  • Cristina López,
  • Sílvia Beà,
  • Dolors Costa,
  • Dolors Colomer,
  • Marina Díaz-Beyá,
  • Maria Rozman,
  • Jordi Esteve

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25168669
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 16
p. 8669

Abstract

Read online

Two new diagnostic classifications of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) were published in 2022 to update current knowledge on disease biology. In previous 2017-edition categories of AML with myelodysplasia-related changes, AML was not otherwise specified, but AML with mutated RUNX1 experienced profound changes. We performed whole exome sequencing on a cohort of 69 patients with cytogenetic intermediate-risk AML that belonged to these diagnostic categories to correlate their mutational pattern and copy-number alterations with their new diagnostic distribution. Our results show that 45% of patients changed their diagnostic category, being AML myelodysplasia-related the most enlarged, mainly due to a high frequency of myelodysplasia-related mutations (58% of patients). These showed a good correlation with multilineage dysplasia and/or myelodysplastic syndrome history, but at the same time, 21% of de novo patients without dysplasia also presented them. RUNX1 was the most frequently mutated gene, with a high co-occurrence rate with other myelodysplasia-related mutations. We found a high prevalence of copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity, frequently inducing a homozygous state in particular mutated genes. Mild differences in current classifications explain the diagnostic disparity in 10% of patients, claiming a forthcoming unified classification.

Keywords