Multiple myeloma immunoglobulin lambda translocations portend poor prognosis.
Benjamin G BarwickPaola NeriNizar J BahlisAjay K NookaMadhav V DhodapkarDavid L JayeCraig C HofmeisterJonathan L KaufmanVikas A GuptaDaniel AuclairJonathan J KeatsSagar LonialPaula M VertinoLawrence H BoisePublished in: Nature communications (2019)
Multiple myeloma is a malignancy of antibody-secreting plasma cells. Most patients benefit from current therapies, however, 20% of patients relapse or die within two years and are deemed high risk. Here we analyze structural variants from 795 newly-diagnosed patients as part of the CoMMpass study. We report translocations involving the immunoglobulin lambda (IgL) locus are present in 10% of patients, and indicative of poor prognosis. This is particularly true for IgL-MYC translocations, which coincide with focal amplifications of enhancers at both loci. Importantly, 78% of IgL-MYC translocations co-occur with hyperdiploid disease, a marker of standard risk, suggesting that IgL-MYC-translocated myeloma is being misclassified. Patients with IgL-translocations fail to benefit from IMiDs, which target IKZF1, a transcription factor that binds the IgL enhancer at some of the highest levels in the myeloma epigenome. These data implicate IgL translocation as a driver of poor prognosis which may be due to IMiD resistance.
Keyphrases
- newly diagnosed
- poor prognosis
- end stage renal disease
- transcription factor
- ejection fraction
- multiple myeloma
- chronic kidney disease
- long non coding rna
- peritoneal dialysis
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- oxidative stress
- genome wide
- machine learning
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- signaling pathway
- big data
- genome wide association study
- artificial intelligence
- patient reported