4.4 Article

A three-gene signature based on MYC, BCL-2 and NFKBIA improves risk stratification in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma

Journal

HAEMATOLOGICA
Volume 106, Issue 9, Pages 2405-2416

Publisher

FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2019.236455

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Funding

  1. AIRC 5x4000 grant [24498]
  2. Italian Ministry of Health

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This study identified a three-gene signature (MBN-signature) based on MYC, BCL-2, and NFKBIA, which refined prognostic stratification in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. The high-risk (MBN Sig-high) subgroup identified most double hit cases and a portion of activated B-cell-derived diffuse large B-cell lymphomas. These results were validated in three independent series, showing potential for future precision-therapy approaches.
Recent randomized trials focused on gene expression-based determination of the cell of origin in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma could not show significant improvements by adding novel agents to standard chemoimmunotherapy. The aim of this study was the identification of a gene signature able to refine current prognostication algorithms and applicable to clinical practice. Here we used a targeted gene expression profiling panel combining the Lymph2Cx signature for cell of origin classification with additional targets including MYC, BCL-2 and NFKBIA, in 186 patients from two randomized trials (discovery cohort) (clinicaltrials gov. Identifier: NCT00355199 and NCT00499018). Data were validated in three independent series (two large public datasets and a real-life cohort). By integrating the cell of origin, MYC/BCL-2 double expressor status and NFKBIA expression, we defined a three-gene signature combining MYC, BCL-2 and NFKBIA (MBN-signature), which outperformed the MYC/BCL-2 double expressor status in multivariate analysis, and allowed further risk stratification within the germinal center B-cell/unclassified subset. The high-risk (MBN Sig-high) subgroup identified the vast majority of double hit cases and a significant fraction of activated B-cell-derived diffuse large B-cell lymphomas. These results were validated in three independent series including a cohort from the REMoDL-B trial, where, in an exploratory ad hoc analysis, the addition of bortezomib in the MBN Sig-high subgroup provided a progression free survival advantage compared with standard chemoimmunotherapy. These data indicate that a simple three-gene signature based on MYC, BCL-2 and NFKBIA could refine the prognostic stratification in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, and might be the basis for future precision -therapy approaches.

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