Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is currently distinguished from myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) based on the presence of 20% blasts in bone marrow, an arbitrary cut-off adopted by the WHO classification and replacing the 30% cut-off required by the older FAB (French, American and British) classification. Patients with t(15;17), t(8;21), or inversion 16 cytogenetic abnormalities are classified as having AML irrespective of the percentage of blasts. We explored the possibility that currently defined molecular abnormalities can distinguish AML from MDS without relying on an arbitrary percentage of blasts in the bone marrow. We compared the molecular profiles obtained by next generation sequencing (NGS) from consecutive patients with a clinical diagnosis of AML or MDS by WHO criteria.

Methods: NGS data from 251 patients with the diagnosis of AML and 294 patients with the diagnosis of MDS was studied. All samples were analyzed using a panel of 25 genes including FLT3, NPM1 SF3B1, CBL, DNMT3A, ASXL1, BRAF, CEBPA, CSFR3, ETV6, EZH2, IDH1, IDH2, JAK2, c-KIT, KRAS, NRAS, PHF6, PTPN11, RUNX1, SETBP1, TET2, TP53, WT1, and ZRSR2. We compared the frequency of mutations in each gene between AML and MDS patients.

Results: Mutations in FLT3 and NPM1 were uniquely and commonly detected in AML (27% and 22%, respectively). In contrast, mutations in SF3B1 gene were uniquely dominant (22%) in MDS and FLT3 and NPM1 mutations were rare (2% and 3%, respectively). SF3B1 mutations were extremely rare in AML (1%). Overall, 102 (41%) of all AML patients had mutations in either FLT3 or NPM1 and 8% of AML patients had mutations in both FLT3 and NPM1. In addition, WT1 gene was mutated in 8% of AML cases, but none of the MDS cases showed WT1 mutation. TET2 gene was commonly mutated in both AML and MDS (25% and 36%, respectively), but the frequency was significantly higher in MDS (P=0.003). IDH1, IDH2, NRAS, and PTPN11 were mutated slightly more often in AML than in MDS, while ASXL1, EZH2, and ZRSR2 were more frequently mutated in MDS than in AML. There was no statistically significant difference in mutation frequency between AML and MDS for the other genes analyzed.

Conclusion: Mutations in FLT3, NPM1 and WT1 are molecular abnormalities characteristically detected in patients with AML and can be used as objective criteria for the classification of AML rather than blast count in bone marrow. These mutations are detected in 49% of AML patients. This suggests that approximately half of AML patients can be diagnosed based on the detection of molecular abnormalities, irrespective of bone marrow morphology. The presence of mutation in SF3B1 gene is also a characteristic molecular finding for MDS.

Table.
AML (No=251)MDS (No=294)P-Value
 No No  
FLT3 68 27 0.00001 
NPM1 55 22 0.0001 
SF3B1 66 22 0.00006 
CBL 10 NS 
DNMT3A 51 20 51 17 0.07 
ASXL1 44 18 75 26 0.01 
BRAF NS 
CEBPA 38 15 51 17 NS 
CSFR3 11 11 NS 
ETV6 NS 
EZH2 25 0.03 
IDH1 20 0.03 
IDH2 17 0.04 
JAK2 10 NS 
KIT NS 
KRAS 11 NS 
NRAS 34 14 18 0.01 
PHF6 NS 
PTPN11 26 10 0.01 
RUNX1 31 12 33 11 NS 
SETBP1 NS 
TET2 64 25 105 36 0.003 
TP53 61 24 75 26 NS 
WT1 19 0.01 
ZRSR2 30 10 0.02 
AML (No=251)MDS (No=294)P-Value
 No No  
FLT3 68 27 0.00001 
NPM1 55 22 0.0001 
SF3B1 66 22 0.00006 
CBL 10 NS 
DNMT3A 51 20 51 17 0.07 
ASXL1 44 18 75 26 0.01 
BRAF NS 
CEBPA 38 15 51 17 NS 
CSFR3 11 11 NS 
ETV6 NS 
EZH2 25 0.03 
IDH1 20 0.03 
IDH2 17 0.04 
JAK2 10 NS 
KIT NS 
KRAS 11 NS 
NRAS 34 14 18 0.01 
PHF6 NS 
PTPN11 26 10 0.01 
RUNX1 31 12 33 11 NS 
SETBP1 NS 
TET2 64 25 105 36 0.003 
TP53 61 24 75 26 NS 
WT1 19 0.01 
ZRSR2 30 10 0.02 

Disclosures

No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Author notes

*

Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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