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Treating classical Hodgkin lymphoma: Spotlight on targeted therapies
with Gilles Salles, Paul Bröckelmann, and Ann S. LaCasce
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With precision medicine a clear goal for future treatment strategies, identifying distinct genetic differences that can guide a more tailored treatment approach is critical. However, many of the studies to assess genetic links in Multiple Myeloma (MM) to date have been carried out on Caucasian (CA) populations of European descent, with limited numbers of African Americans (AA). Worldwide statistics for MM tell us that AAs are in fact at a much higher risk of developing MM, with higher morbidity rates, although the biological basis for this is little understood.
In a recent study published in PLOS Genetics by Zarko Manojlovic from the Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, whole exome RNA sequencing of 718 MM patients was analyzed and correlated with clinical data to assess key differences between Newly Diagnosed (ND) MM patients of AA and CA descent.
The data points are given as CA vs AA:
This is the first study to examine such a large cohort specifically for race-related genetic differences in MM and confirms several findings from previous studies, including an earlier age of onset for AA patients and a list of commonly mutated genes, with differences apparent between patients of different descent. In particular, FAM46C has been linked to other tumors in patients with African ancestry. The link with decreased survival in patients harboring the BRAFV600E mutation, and a higher frequency in CA, is also of note, as patients with this mutation can be treated specifically with BRAF inhibitors. Interestingly, three genes identified as having a higher mutational frequency in AA: BCL7A, BRWD3, and AUTS2, have also been linked with other hematological malignancies and are now new candidate genes for MM studies, possibly overlooked due to lower numbers of AA pts in previous studies. Finally, the differences between AA and CA in TP53 and IR4 mutation frequency were striking, with patients of European ancestry six times more likely to have mutations in TP53. Both genes have been linked with poorer survival, which does not tally with what is observed in MM – that AA patients have poorer survival, indicating that other factors may be at play. Ultimately, this beckons further studies to clarify specific genetic links and the underlying biological basis.
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