Background:

While myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN), including essential thrombocythemia (ET), polycythemia vera (PV), and primary myelofibrosis (MF), are usually sporadic, adult-onset neoplasms, an increasing number of germline risk alleles have been described (e.g. EGLN1, ETV6, SH2B3, and ATM) in these disorders. DDX41MT Germline Predisposition Syndrome (GPS) is the most common myeloid GPS in adults and while there is extensive data on MDS/AML, little is known regarding MPN occurring in this context. We carried out this study to define the prevalence and characteristics of DDX41MT-GPS associated MPN.

Methods:

After IRB approval, we retrospectively assessed the Mayo Clinic cohort of 174 patients with DDX41MT-GPS, which included both pathogenic and clinically relevant germline variants of undetermined significance (VUS), based on our previous analysis (Badar et al Haematologica 2023). Standard statistical measures were applied.

Results:

We identified 12 (6.9%) patients with MPN (ET-5, PV-2, PMF-4, MPN-NOS-1). The median age at MPN diagnosis was 61.2 years (range, 8.-70.4); 58.3% (n=7) were male, and 83.3% (n=10) were Caucasian. A family history of hematologic malignancy was present in 16.7% (n=2, AML and T-LGL), while 50% (n=6) had a family history of visceral malignancies and 41.7% (n=5) had no family history of malignancies.

Among ET patients (n=5) with DDX41MT-GPS, JAK2V617F was the MPN driver in 4 (80%) while type 1-CALR (L367fs*46) was a driver in 1 (20%). This included a 9-year-old child diagnosed with JAK2V617FMT ET. The DDX41 variant was classified as pathogenic in 40% (n=2; E113Kfs*14, D140Gfs*2) and VUS in 60% (n=3; V544L, V591I, P38L). Bone marrow (BM) aspirates in the ET patients were hypercellular in 40% (n=2), normocellular in 40% (n=2) and hypocellular in 20% (n=1), and none had increased blasts, or reticulin fibrosis (RF). In addition to JAK2V617F, somatic mutations seen included SF3B1 (K666T, VAF 16%) in 1 patient and IDH2 (R140Q, VAF 6%) and DNMT3A (R882H, VAF 7%) in 1 patient, respectively. With a median follow-up from diagnosis of 3.9yrs (range 2.9-8.9), there were no thrombotic events and no disease progressions was documented.

There were 2 patients with JAK2V167FMT PV in whom the DDX41MT were clinically significant VUS (c.138+5G>T and M155I). Both patients had hypercellular BM, with no increase in blasts, no RF, normal karyotypes and no additional somatic mutations. With a median follow up of 7.5yrs (range, 2.1-12.9), 1 patient developed a deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and there were no fibrotic or leukemic transformations.

There were 4 patients with PMF; 3 (75%) with JAK2V617F and 1(25%) with a type 1-CALR driver mutation (L367fs*46). DIPPS-plus scores ranged from 1 to 4 (median 2.5). The DDX41 variants were pathogenic in 50% (n=2, E256K and P78Qfs*3) and VUS in 50% (n=2, P510S and M155I). The median grade of RF at PMF diagnosis was grade 2 (range, 2-3). BM were hypercellular in 75% (n=3) and hypocellular in 25% (n=1), and 1 patient had 3% peripheral blasts (and no BM blasts). Somatic co-mutations included TET2 in 1 patient with a JAK2V617F, and CBL, EZH2 and SRSF2 in 1 patient with a CALR driver-mutation, respectively. PMF patients were treated with ruxolitinib (n=3), stem cell transplant (n=1), and pIFNα (n=1). With a median follow up of 3.9yrs (range,1.1-21.9), all patients were alive, and none had leukemia transformation.

There was 1 patient with a JAK2V617F MPN-NOS with trisomy 9, where the DDX41MT-GPS was a VUS (I215L). There were no somatic co-mutations and at last follow up (3.1 years), there was no evidence for progression.

Conclusions:

While associations between late onset MDS/AML and DDX41MT-GPS has been well established, we systematically describe the MPN landscape seen in this context. MPN was diagnosed in 7% of our cohort, with JAK2V617F being the most common driver mutation. Most importantly, unlike in AML/MDS, where somatic DDX41 mutations are frequently associated with neoplastic transformation (30-50%; R525H being most common), none of our MPN patients had a somatic DDX41 mutation. Our work underscores the importance of germline mutation testing in patients with MPN.

Disclosures

Badar:pfizer: Other: Advisory board; Takeda: Other: advisory board ; Morphosys: Other: Advisory Board. Mangaonkar:BMS: Research Funding; Incyte: Research Funding; Novartis: Research Funding. Gangat:Agios: Other: Advisory Board; DISC Medicine: Consultancy, Other: Advisory Board . Litzow:Abbvie: Research Funding; Amgen: Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Actinium: Research Funding; Astellas: Research Funding; Pluristem: Research Funding; Sanofi: Research Funding; Beigene: Speakers Bureau; Biosight: Other: Data Safety Monitoring Committee. Patnaik:Astra Zeneca: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Polaris: Research Funding; Solu therapeutics: Research Funding; Kura Oncology: Research Funding; Epigenetix: Research Funding; StemLine: Research Funding.

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