4.6 Article

Cytogenetic Assessment and Risk Stratification in Myelofibrosis with Optical Genome Mapping

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 15, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers15113039

Keywords

myelofibrosis; optical genome mapping; chromosome banding analysis; prognosis

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Cytogenetic assessment is crucial for myelofibrosis patients, but traditional techniques often fail to provide useful karyotypes. This study introduces optical genome mapping (OGM) as a promising method for high-resolution evaluation of chromosomal aberrations. OGM, combined with NGS, enabled risk classification in all cases, identifying additional cryptic aberrations and upgrading risk categories. The study highlights OGM as a valuable tool to improve disease risk stratification in myelofibrosis patients.
Cytogenetic assessment in myelofibrosis is essential for risk stratification and patient management. However, an informative karyotype is unavailable in a significant proportion of patients. Optical genome mapping (OGM) is a promising technique that allows for a high-resolution assessment of chromosomal aberrations (structural variants, copy number variants, and loss of heterozygosity) in a single workflow. In this study, peripheral blood samples from a series of 21 myelofibrosis patients were analyzed via OGM. We assessed the clinical impact of the application of OGM for disease risk stratification using the DIPSS-plus, GIPSS, and MIPSS70+v2 prognostic scores compared with the standard-of-care approach. OGM, in combination with NGS, allowed for risk classification in all cases, compared to only 52% when conventional techniques were used. Cases with unsuccessful karyotypes (n = 10) using conventional techniques were fully characterized using OGM. In total, 19 additional cryptic aberrations were identified in 9 out of 21 patients (43%). No alterations were found via OGM in 4/21 patients with previously normal karyotypes. OGM upgraded the risk category for three patients with available karyotypes. This is the first study using OGM in myelofibrosis. Our data support that OGM is a valuable tool that can greatly contribute to improve disease risk stratification in myelofibrosis patients.

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