Cancers (Jul 2023)

Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes of Patients with Primary and Secondary Myelofibrosis According to the Genomic Classification Using Targeted Next-Generation Sequencing

  • Marta Garrote,
  • Mónica López-Guerra,
  • Eduardo Arellano-Rodrigo,
  • María Rozman,
  • Sara Carbonell,
  • Francesca Guijarro,
  • Marta Santaliestra,
  • Ana Triguero,
  • Dolors Colomer,
  • Francisco Cervantes,
  • Alberto Álvarez-Larrán

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15153904
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 15
p. 3904

Abstract

Read online

Myelofibrosis (MF) is a heterogeneous disease regarding its mutational landscape, clinical presentation, and outcomes. The aim of our work is to evaluate the genomic classification of MF considering whether it is primary or secondary. One-hundred seventy-five patients, 81 with primary MF (PMF) and 94 with secondary MF (SMF) were hierarchically allocated into eight molecular groups. We found that TP53 disruption/aneuploidy (n = 16, 9%) was more frequent (12% versus 6%) and showed higher allele burden (57% versus 15%, p = 0.01) in SMF than in PMF, and was associated with shorter survival (median 3.5 years). Mutations in chromatin/spliceosome genes (n = 72, 41%) represented the most frequent genomic group in PMF. Homozygous JAK2 mutation (n = 40, 23%) was enriched with old patients with SMF after long-standing polycythemia vera, whereas MF with heterozygous JAK2 mutation (n = 22, 13%) was similarly distributed among PMF and SMF. MF with CALR mutation (n = 19, 11%) predominated in post-essential thrombocythemia MF. The remaining genomic groups were infrequent. TP53 disruption, chromatin/spliceosome mutation, and homozygous JAK2 mutation were associated with significantly shorter survival and higher risk of progression. In conclusion, genomic classification reveals different pathogenic pathways between PMF and SMF and provides relevant information regarding disease phenotype and outcomes.

Keywords