Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Insights into the genomic landscape of MYD88 wild-type Waldenström macroglobulinemia.

Blood Advances 2018 November 14
Activating MYD88 mutations are present in 95% of Waldenström macroglobulinemia (WM) patients, and trigger NF-κB through BTK and IRAK. The BTK inhibitor ibrutinib is active in MYD88- mutated (MYD88 MUT ) WM patients, but shows lower activity in MYD88 wild-type ( MYD88 WT ) disease. MYD88 WT patients also show shorter overall survival, and increased risk of disease transformation in some series. The genomic basis for these findings remains to be clarified. We performed whole exome and transcriptome sequencing of sorted tumor samples from 18 MYD88 WT patients and compared findings with WM patients with MYD88 MUT disease. We identified somatic mutations predicted to activate NF-κB ( TBL1XR1 , PTPN13, MALT1 , BCL10 , NFKB2 , NFKBIB , NFKBIZ, and UDRL1F ), impart epigenomic dysregulation ( KMT2D , KMT2C, and KDM6A) , or impair DNA damage repair ( TP53 , ATM , and TRRAP ). Predicted NF-κB activating mutations were downstream of BTK and IRAK, and many overlapped with somatic mutations found in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. A distinctive transcriptional profile in MYD88 WT WM was identified, although most differentially expressed genes overlapped with MYD88 MUT WM consistent with the many clinical and morphological characteristics that are shared by these WM subgroups. Overall survival was adversely affected by mutations in DNA damage response in MYD88 WT WM patients. The findings depict genomic and transcriptional events associated with MYD88 WT WM and provide mechanistic insights for disease transformation, decreased ibrutinib activity, and novel drug approaches for this population.

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