Login / Signup

Multi-dimensional scaling techniques unveiled gain1q&loss13q co-occurrence in Multiple Myeloma patients with specific genomic, transcriptional and adverse clinical features.

Carolina TerragnaAndrea PolettiVincenza SolliMarina MartelloElena ZamagniLucia PantaniEnrica BorsiIlaria VigliottaGaia MazzocchettiSilvia ArmuzziBarbara TaurisanoNicoletta TestoniGiulia MarzocchiAjsi KanapariIgnazia PistisPaola TacchettiKatia MancusoSerena RocchiIlaria RizzelloMichele Cavo
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
The complexity of Multiple Myeloma (MM) is driven by several genomic aberrations, interacting with disease-related and/or -unrelated factors and conditioning patients' clinical outcome. Patient's prognosis is hardly predictable, as commonly employed MM risk models do not precisely partition high- from low-risk patients, preventing the reliable recognition of early relapsing/refractory patients. By a dimensionality reduction approach, here we dissect the genomic landscape of a large cohort of newly diagnosed MM patients, modelling all the possible interactions between any MM chromosomal alterations. We highlight the presence of a distinguished cluster of patients in the low-dimensionality space, with unfavorable clinical behavior, whose biology was driven by the co-occurrence of chromosomes 1q CN gain and 13 CN loss. Presence or absence of these alterations define MM patients overexpressing either CCND2 or CCND1, fostering the implementation of biology-based patients' classification models to describe the different MM clinical behaviors.
Keyphrases