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. 2022 Jul;1(7):EVIDoa2200008.
doi: 10.1056/EVIDoa2200008. Epub 2022 Jun 12.

Molecular International Prognostic Scoring System for Myelodysplastic Syndromes

Elsa Bernard  1 Heinz TuechlerPeter L Greenberg  2 Robert P Hasserjian  3 Juan E Arango Ossa  1 Yasuhito Nannya  4   5 Sean M Devlin  1 Maria Creignou  6 Philippe Pinel  1 Lily Monnier  1 Gunes Gundem  1 Juan S Medina-Martinez  1 Dylan Domenico  1 Martin Jädersten  6 Ulrich Germing  7 Guillermo Sanz  8   9   10 Arjan A van de Loosdrecht  11 Olivier Kosmider  12 Matilde Y Follo  13 Felicitas Thol  14 Lurdes Zamora  15 Ronald F Pinheiro  16 Andrea Pellagatti  17 Harold K Elias  18 Detlef Haase  19 Christina Ganster  19 Lionel Ades  20 Magnus Tobiasson  6 Laura Palomo  21 Matteo Giovanni Della Porta  22 Akifumi Takaori-Kondo  23 Takayuki Ishikawa  24 Shigeru Chiba  25 Senji Kasahara  26 Yasushi Miyazaki  27 Agnes Viale  28 Kety Huberman  28 Pierre Fenaux  20 Monika Belickova  29 Michael R Savona  30 Virginia M Klimek  18 Fabio P S Santos  31 Jacqueline Boultwood  17 Ioannis Kotsianidis  32 Valeria Santini  33 Francesc Solé  21 Uwe Platzbecker  34 Michael Heuser  14 Peter Valent  35   36 Kazuma Ohyashiki  37 Carlo Finelli  38 Maria Teresa Voso  39 Lee-Yung Shih  40 Michaela Fontenay  12 Joop H Jansen  41 José Cervera  42 Norbert Gattermann  7 Benjamin L Ebert  43 Rafael Bejar  44 Luca Malcovati  45 Mario Cazzola  45 Seishi Ogawa  4   46   47 Eva Hellström-Lindberg  6 Elli Papaemmanuil  1
Affiliations

Molecular International Prognostic Scoring System for Myelodysplastic Syndromes

Elsa Bernard et al. NEJM Evid. 2022 Jul.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Risk stratification and therapeutic decision-making for myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are based on the International Prognostic Scoring System–Revised (IPSS-R), which considers hematologic parameters and cytogenetic abnormalities. Somatic gene mutations are not yet used in the risk stratification of patients with MDS. METHODS: To develop a clinical-molecular prognostic model (IPSS-Molecular [IPSS-M]), pretreatment diagnostic or peridiagnostic samples from 2957 patients with MDS were profiled for mutations in 152 genes. Clinical and molecular variables were evaluated for associations with leukemia-free survival, leukemic transformation, and overall survival. Feature selection was applied to determine the set of independent IPSS-M prognostic variables. The relative weights of the selected variables were estimated using a robust Cox multivariable model adjusted for confounders. The IPSS-M was validated in an external cohort of 754 Japanese patients with MDS. RESULTS: We mapped at least one oncogenic genomic alteration in 94% of patients with MDS. Multivariable analysis identified TP53multihit, FLT3 mutations, and MLLPTD as top genetic predictors of adverse outcomes. Conversely, SF3B1 mutations were associated with favorable outcomes, but this was modulated by patterns of comutation. Using hematologic parameters, cytogenetic abnormalities, and somatic mutations of 31 genes, the IPSS-M resulted in a unique risk score for individual patients. We further derived six IPSS-M risk categories with prognostic differences. Compared with the IPSS-R, the IPSS-M improved prognostic discrimination across all clinical end points and restratified 46% of patients. The IPSS-M was applicable in primary and secondary/therapy-related MDS. To simplify clinical use of the IPSS-M, we developed an open-access Web calculator that accounts for missing values. CONCLUSIONS: Combining genomic profiling with hematologic and cytogenetic parameters, the IPSS-M improves the risk stratification of patients with MDS and represents a valuable tool for clinical decision-making. (Funded by Celgene Corporation through the MDS Foundation, the Josie Robertson Investigators Program, the Edward P. Evans Foundation, the Projects of National Relevance of the Italian Ministry of University and Research, Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro, the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development, Cancer Research UK, the Austrian Science Fund, the MEXT [Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology] Program for Promoting Research on the Supercomputer Fugaku, the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, the Taiwan Department of Health, and Celgene Corporation through the MDS Foundation.)

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