Mutational mechanisms in multiply relapsed pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Publication date
2024-11
Authors
van der Ham, Cédric G.
Suurenbroek, Lianne C.
Kleisman, Michelle M.
Antić, Željko
Lelieveld, Stefan H.
Yeong, Marley
Westera, Liset
Sonneveld, Edwin
Hoogerbrugge, Peter M.
van der Velden, Vincent H.J.
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Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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cc_by_nc_nd
Abstract
Pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is marked by low mutational load at initial diagnosis, which increases at relapse. To determine which processes are active in (relapsed) ALL and how they behave during disease progression before and after therapy, we performed whole genome sequencing on 97 tumor samples of 29 multiply relapsed ALL patients. Mutational load increased upon relapse in 28 patients and upon every subsequent relapse in 22 patients. In addition to two clock-like mutational processes, we identified UV-like damage, APOBEC activity, reactive oxygen species, thiopurine-associated damage and an unknown therapy component as drivers of mutagenesis. Mutational processes often affected patients over longer time periods, but could also occur in isolated events, suggesting the requirement of additional triggers. Thiopurine exposure was the most prominent source of new mutations in relapse, affecting over half of the studied patients in first and/or later relapse and causing potential relapse-driving mutations in multiple patients. Our data demonstrate that multiple mutational processes frequently act in parallel as prominent secondary drivers with dynamic activity during ALL development and progression.
Keywords
Hematology, Oncology, Cancer Research
Citation
van der Ham, C G, Suurenbroek, L C, Kleisman, M M, Antić, Ž, Lelieveld, S H, Yeong, M, Westera, L, Sonneveld, E, Hoogerbrugge, P M, van der Velden, V H J, van Leeuwen, F N & Kuiper, R P 2024, 'Mutational mechanisms in multiply relapsed pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia', Leukemia, vol. 38, no. 11, pp. 2366-2375. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41375-024-02403-7