Comprehensive analysis of isolated der(1;7)(q10;p10) in a large international homogenous cohort of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes

  • Christina Ganster
  • Catharina Müller-Thomas
  • Claudia Haferlach
  • Corinna Strupp
  • Kiyoyuki Ogata
  • Ulrich Germing
  • Barbara Hildebrandt
  • Mar Mallo
  • Michael Lübbert
  • Christel Müller
  • Francesc Solé
  • Katharina S Götze
  • Peter Vandenberghe
  • Gudrun Göhring
  • Tilman Steinmetz
  • Nicolaus Kröger
  • Uwe Platzbecker
  • Ulrike Söling
  • Sophie Raynaud
  • Katayoon Shirneshan
  • Julie Schanz
  • Detlef Haase

Abstract

The karyotype is a strong independent prognostic factor in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). Since the implementation of the new comprehensive cytogenetic scoring system for MDS, chromosome 7 anomalies are no longer generally assigned to poor risk features but are thoroughly separated. However, der(1;7)(q10;p10), hereinafter der(1;7), is merged into the group labeled "any other single" and belongs to the intermediate risk group, just by definition due to lack of adequate clinical data. The aim of our international collaborative was to clarify the "real" prognostic impact of der(1;7) on a homogenous and well-documented data base. We performed detailed analysis of 63 MDS patients with isolated der(1;7) constituting the largest cohort hitherto reported. Furthermore, clinical data are compared with those of patients with isolated del(7q) and isolated monosomy 7. Median overall survival (OS) of patients with der(1;7) is 26 months (hazard ratio (HR) 0.91 for del(7q) vs der(1;7) and 2.53 for monosomy 7 vs der(1;7)). The der(1;7) is associated with profound thrombocytopenia most probably causing the reduced OS which is in striking contrast to the low risk for AML transformation (HR 3.89 for del(7q) vs der(1;7) and 5.88 for monosomy 7 vs der(1;7)). Molecular karyotyping indicates that der(1;7) is generated in a single step during mitosis and that a chromosomal imbalance rather than a single disrupted gene accounts for malignancy. Thus, the current cytogenetic scoring system assigning isolated der(1;7) to the intermediate risk group is now confirmed by a sufficient data set.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1045-2257
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10.2019
PubMed 30994215