Relapse of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) remains a leading cause of childhood death. Prior studies have shown clonal mutations at relapse often arise from relapse-fated subclones that exist at diagnosis. However, the genomic landscape, evolutionary trajectories and mutational mechanisms driving relapse are incompletely understood. In an analysis of 92 cases of relapsed childhood ALL, incorporating multimodal DNA and RNA sequencing, deep digital mutational tracking and xenografting to formally define clonal structure, we identify 50 significant targets of mutation with distinct patterns of mutational acquisition or enrichment. , and Ras signaling mutations rose from diagnosis subclones, whereas variants in and were exclusively observed at relapse. Evolutionary modeling and xenografting demonstrated that relapse-fated clones were minor (50%), major (27%) or multiclonal (18%) at diagnosis. Putative second leukemias, including those with lineage shift, were shown to most commonly represent relapse from an ancestral clone rather than a truly independent second primary leukemia. A subset of leukemias prone to repeated relapse exhibited hypermutation driven by at least three distinct mutational processes, resulting in heightened neoepitope burden and potential vulnerability to immunotherapy. Finally, relapse-driving sequence mutations were detected prior to relapse using deep digital PCR at levels comparable to orthogonal approaches to monitor levels of measurable residual disease. These results provide a genomic framework to anticipate and circumvent relapse by earlier detection and targeting of relapse-fated clones.
About The Expert
Esmé Waanders
Zhaohui Gu
Stephanie M Dobson
Željko Antić
Jeremy Chase Crawford
Xiaotu Ma
Michael N Edmonson
Debbie Payne-Turner
Maartje van der Vorst
Marjolijn C J Jongmans
Irina McGuire
Xin Zhou
Jian Wang
Lei Shi
Stanley Pounds
Deqing Pei
Cheng Cheng
Guangchun Song
Yiping Fan
Ying Shao
Michael Rusch
Kelly McCastlain
Jiangyan Yu
Ruben van Boxtel
Francis Blokzijl
Ilaria Iacobucci
Kathryn G Roberts
Ji Wen
Gang Wu
Jing Ma
John Easton
Geoffrey Neale
Scott R Olsen
Kim E Nichols
Ching-Hon Pui
Jinghui Zhang
William E Evans
Mary V Relling
Jun J Yang
Paul G Thomas
John E Dick
Roland P Kuiper
Charles G Mullighan
References
PubMed