TY - JOUR
T1 - Four genes predict high risk of progression from smoldering to symptomatic multiple myeloma (SWOG s0120)
AU - Khan, Rashid
AU - Dhodapkar, Madhav
AU - Rosentha, Adam
AU - Heuck, Christoph
AU - Papanikolaou, Xenofon
AU - Qu, Pingping
AU - van Rhee, Frits
AU - Zangari, Maurizio
AU - Jethava, Yogesh
AU - Epstein, Joshua
AU - Yaccoby, Shmuel
AU - Hoering, Antje
AU - Crowley, John
AU - Petty, Nathan
AU - Bailey, Clyde
AU - Morgan, Gareth
AU - Barlogie, Bart
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2015 Ferrata Storti Foundation.
PY - 2015/9/7
Y1 - 2015/9/7
N2 - Multiple myeloma is preceded by an asymptomatic phase, comprising monoclonal gammopathy of uncertain significance and smoldering myeloma. Compared to the former, smoldering myeloma has a higher and non-uniform rate of progression to clinical myeloma, reflecting a subset of patients with higher risk. We evaluated the gene expression profile of smoldering myeloma plasma cells among 105 patients enrolled in a prospective observational trial at our institution, with a view to identifying a high-risk signature. Baseline clinical, bone marrow, cytogenetic and radiologic data were evaluated for their potential to predict time to therapy for symptomatic myeloma. A gene signature derived from four genes, at an optimal binary cut-point of 9.28, identified 14 patients (13%) with a 2- year therapy risk of 85.7%. Conversely, a low four-gene score (<9.28) combined with baseline monoclonal protein <3 g/dL and albumin ≥3.5 g/dL identified 61 patients with low-risk smoldering myeloma with a 5.0% chance of progression at 2 years. The top 40 probe sets showed concordance with indices of chromosome instability. These data demonstrate high discriminatory power of a gene-based assay and suggest a role for dysregulation of mitotic checkpoints in the context of genomic instability as a hallmark of high-risk smoldering myeloma.
AB - Multiple myeloma is preceded by an asymptomatic phase, comprising monoclonal gammopathy of uncertain significance and smoldering myeloma. Compared to the former, smoldering myeloma has a higher and non-uniform rate of progression to clinical myeloma, reflecting a subset of patients with higher risk. We evaluated the gene expression profile of smoldering myeloma plasma cells among 105 patients enrolled in a prospective observational trial at our institution, with a view to identifying a high-risk signature. Baseline clinical, bone marrow, cytogenetic and radiologic data were evaluated for their potential to predict time to therapy for symptomatic myeloma. A gene signature derived from four genes, at an optimal binary cut-point of 9.28, identified 14 patients (13%) with a 2- year therapy risk of 85.7%. Conversely, a low four-gene score (<9.28) combined with baseline monoclonal protein <3 g/dL and albumin ≥3.5 g/dL identified 61 patients with low-risk smoldering myeloma with a 5.0% chance of progression at 2 years. The top 40 probe sets showed concordance with indices of chromosome instability. These data demonstrate high discriminatory power of a gene-based assay and suggest a role for dysregulation of mitotic checkpoints in the context of genomic instability as a hallmark of high-risk smoldering myeloma.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84940947283
U2 - 10.3324/haematol.2015.124651
DO - 10.3324/haematol.2015.124651
M3 - Article
C2 - 26022710
AN - SCOPUS:84940947283
SN - 0390-6078
VL - 100
SP - 1214
EP - 1221
JO - Haematologica
JF - Haematologica
IS - 9
ER -