Clinical implications of CSF-ctDNA positivity in newly diagnosed diffuse large B cell lymphoma.
Jin-Hua LiangYi-Fan WuHao-Rui ShenYue LiJun-Heng LiangRui GaoWei HuaChun-Yu ShangKai-Xin DuTong-Yao XingXin-Yu ZhangChen-Xuan WangLiu-Qing ZhuYang W ShaoJian-Yong LiJia-Zhu WuHua YinLi WangWei XuPublished in: Leukemia (2024)
The clinical implications of CSF-ctDNA positivity in newly diagnosed diffuse large B cell lymphoma (ND-DLBCL) remains largely unexplored. One hundred ND-DLBCL patients were consecutively enrolled as training cohort and another 26 ND-DLBCL patients were prospectively enrolled in validation cohort. CSF-ctDNA positivity (CSF(+)) was identified in 25 patients (25.0%) in the training cohort and 7 patients (26.9%) in the validation cohort, extremely higher than CNS involvement rate detected by conventional methods. Patients with mutations of CARD11, JAK2, ID3, and PLCG2 were more predominant with CSF(+) while FAT4 mutations were negatively correlated with CSF(+). The downregulation of PI3K-AKT signaling, focal adhesion, actin cytoskeleton, and tight junction pathways were enriched in CSF(+) ND-DLBCL. Furthermore, pretreatment CSF(+) was significantly associated with poor outcomes. Three risk factors, including high CSF protein level, high plasma ctDNA burden, and involvement of high-risk sites were used to predict the risk of CSF(+) in ND-DLBCL. The sensitivity and specificity of pretreatment CSF-ctDNA to predict CNS relapse were 100% and 77.3%. Taken together, we firstly present the prevalence and the genomic and transcriptomic landscape for CSF-ctDNA(+) DLBCL and highlight the importance of CSF-ctDNA as a noninvasive biomarker in detecting and monitoring of CSF infiltration and predicting CNS relapse in DLBCL.
Keyphrases
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- newly diagnosed
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- risk factors
- epstein barr virus
- chronic kidney disease
- cerebrospinal fluid
- blood brain barrier
- signaling pathway
- gene expression
- type diabetes
- escherichia coli
- cell proliferation
- cystic fibrosis
- single cell
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- rna seq
- patient reported
- insulin resistance
- binding protein
- fatty acid
- small molecule
- weight loss
- circulating tumor cells
- structural basis
- cell adhesion