Integrated genetic, epigenetic, and immune landscape of TP53 mutant AML and higher risk MDS treated with azacitidine Journal Article


Authors: Zeidan, A. M.; Bewersdorf, J. P.; Hasle, V.; Shallis, R. M.; Thompson, E.; de Menezes, D. L.; Rose, S.; Boss, I.; Halene, S.; Haferlach, T.; Fox, B. A.
Article Title: Integrated genetic, epigenetic, and immune landscape of TP53 mutant AML and higher risk MDS treated with azacitidine
Abstract: Background: TP53 mutations are associated with an adverse prognosis in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and higher-risk myelodysplastic syndromes (HR-MDS). However, the integrated genetic, epigenetic, and immunologic landscape of TP53-mutated AML/HR-MDS is not well defined. Objectives: To define the genetic, epigenetic, and immunologic landscape of TP53-mutant and TP53 wild-type AML and HR-MDS patients. Design: Post hoc analysis of TP53-mutant and TP53 wild-type patients treated on the randomized FUSION trial with azacitidine ± the anti-PD-L1 antibody durvalumab. Methods: We performed extensive molecular, epigenetic, and immunologic assays on a well-annotated clinical trial dataset of 61 patients with TP53-mutated disease (37 AML, 24 MDS) and 144 TP53 wild-type (89 AML, 55 MDS) patients, all of whom received azacitidine-based therapy. A 38 gene-targeted myeloid mutation analysis from screening bone marrow (BM) was performed. DNA methylation arrays, immunophenotyping and immune checkpoint expression by flow cytometry, and gene expression profiles by bulk RNA sequencing were assessed at baseline and serially during the trial. Results: Global DNA methylation from peripheral blood was independent of TP53 mutation and allelic status. AZA therapy led to a statistically significant decrease in global DNA methylation scores independent of TP53 mutation status. In BM from TP53-mutant patients, we found both a higher T-cell population and upregulation of inhibitory immune checkpoint proteins such as PD-L1 compared to TP53 wild-type. RNA sequencing analyses revealed higher expression of the myeloid immune checkpoint gene LILRB3 in TP53-mutant samples suggesting a novel therapeutic target. Conclusion: This integrated analysis of the genetic, epigenetic, and immunophenotypic landscape of TP53 mutant AML/HR-MDS suggests that differences in the immune landscape resulting in an immunosuppressive microenvironment rather than epigenetic differences contribute to the poor prognosis of TP53-mutant AML/HR-MDS with mono- or multihit TP53 mutation status. Trial registration: FUSION trial (NCT02775903). © The Author(s), 2024.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; aged; middle aged; unclassified drug; chronic myelomonocytic leukemia; genetic trait; major clinical study; overall survival; single nucleotide polymorphism; missense mutation; clinical trial; flow cytometry; neutrophil count; phase 2 clinical trial; gene expression; anemia; bone marrow; randomized controlled trial; cytogenetics; hemoglobin; protein p53; dna methylation; risk assessment; myelodysplastic syndrome; gamma interferon; epigenetics; multicenter study; upregulation; leukocyte count; lymphocyte count; azacitidine; myeloproliferative neoplasm; platelet count; dna topoisomerase; rna sequence; programmed death 1 ligand 1; landscape; aml; mds; refractory anemia; acute myeloid leukemia; tp53 mutation; immune checkpoint inhibitor; international prognostic scoring system; immune phenotype; human; male; female; article; rna sequencing; durvalumab; gene set enrichment analysis; refractory cytopenia; b cell leukemia 11b; cytoskeleton associated protein 4; dna topoisomerase 3 alpha; nfat activating protein with itam motif 1; sorting nexin 18 pseudogene 6; t box transcription factor 21; nutritional epigenetics
Journal Title: Therapeutic Advances in Hematology
Volume: 15
ISSN: 2040-6207
Publisher: Sage Publications  
Date Published: 2024-01-01
Start Page: 15:20406207241257904
Language: English
DOI: 10.1177/20406207241257904
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11180421
PUBMED: 38883163
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors