Jana Werner, Christine Damm-Welk, Marius Rohde, Patrick Hundsdörfer, Simon Vieth, Axel Karow, Anke Barnbrock, Wolfram Klapper, Julia Richter, Carla Koslowski, Luisa Kruppa, Malik Alawi, Amelie Alfert, Birgit Burkhardt, Wilhelm Wößmann, Fabian Knörr
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Early detection of treatment failure in pediatric patients with mature B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) could improve treatment stratification. Analysis of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) has been established as a biomarker in adult patients with mature B-cell NHL (B-NHL); however, data on ctDNA in pediatric mature B-NHL are lacking.
Methods: We investigated genotyping and disease monitoring in initial plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA) by targeted, normal-matched sequencing in 19 pediatric patients with mature B-NHL, 16 of whom had Burkitt lymphoma or leukemia. Matching lymphoma DNA was available in 18 patients.
Results: Concentrations of cfDNA were 2.6-36 × 103 haploid genome equivalents/mL plasma (median, 7.8 × 103). In 10 patients with high-risk disease (risk groups R3 and R4), 60% of somatic short variants were detected in both plasma and lymphoma samples using a tumor-agnostic approach, whereas 26% and 14% were identified in DNA from lymphoma or plasma samples only. In 4/10 patients with high-risk disease, eight non-silent variants were identified only in the plasma samples. In patients with low-risk disease, 27% of mutations were shared in plasma and tumor; 65% and 8% were detected in DNA from lymphoma or plasma samples only. In a tumor-informed approach, ctDNA was detectable in 16/18 plasma samples with a proportion of 0.045%-55%, demonstrating its potential for minimal disease monitoring.
Conclusions: Non-invasive genotyping from a plasma sample is feasible in high-risk pediatric mature B-cell lymphoma patients. Our findings provide the basis for investigating the clinical utility of non-invasive lymphoma genotyping and disease monitoring in pediatric mature B-NHL.
期刊介绍:
Pediatric Blood & Cancer publishes the highest quality manuscripts describing basic and clinical investigations of blood disorders and malignant diseases of childhood including diagnosis, treatment, epidemiology, etiology, biology, and molecular and clinical genetics of these diseases as they affect children, adolescents, and young adults. Pediatric Blood & Cancer will also include studies on such treatment options as hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, immunology, and gene therapy.