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. 2025 Jan 16;145(3):311-324.
doi: 10.1182/blood.2024024817.

Genetic alteration of class I HLA in cutaneous T-cell lymphoma

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Genetic alteration of class I HLA in cutaneous T-cell lymphoma

Alexa C Kwang et al. Blood. .

Abstract

Abnormalities involving class I HLA are frequent in many lymphoma subtypes but have not yet been extensively studied in cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCLs). We characterized the occurrence of class I HLA abnormalities in 65 patients with advanced mycosis fungoides or Sézary syndrome. Targeted DNA sequencing, including coverage of HLA loci, revealed at least 1 HLA abnormality in 26 of 65 patients (40%). Twelve unique somatic HLA mutations were identified across 9 patients, and loss of heterozygosity or biallelic loss of HLA was found to affect 24 patients. Although specific HLA alleles were commonly disrupted, these events did not associate with a decrease in the total class I HLA expression. Genetic events preferentially disrupted HLA alleles capable of presenting greater numbers of putative neoantigens. HLA abnormalities co-occurred with other genetic immune evasion events and were associated with worse progression-free survival. Single-cell analyses demonstrated that HLA abnormalities were frequently subclonal. Through analysis of serial samples, we observed that disrupting class I HLA events change dynamically over the disease course. The dynamics of HLA disruption are highlighted in a patient who received pembrolizumab and in whom resistance to pembrolizumab was associated with the elimination of an HLA mutation. Overall, our findings show that genomic class I HLA abnormalities are common in advanced CTCL and may be an important consideration in understanding the effects of immunotherapy in CTCL.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: D.M.K. reports serving as a consultant for Roche, Adaptive Biotechnologies, and Genentech; reports being a cofounder of and having equity ownership interest in Foresight Diagnostics; and reports issued patents and filings related to cancer biomarkers assigned to Stanford University and licensed to Foresight Diagnostics. M.S.K. reports receiving research funding from Nutcracker Therapeutics. The remaining authors declare no competing financial interests.

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