Objective: To study the correlation between tumor-associated somatic gene mutation and age in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and acute myeloid leukemia transformed from myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS/AML).
Methods: A total of 111 patients primarily diagnosed as MDS or MDS/AML were selected. Bone marrow samples from patients were collected or bone marrow smears prepared at the initial diagnosis were used for detecting the somatic gene mutations of 58 genes related with hematologic tumors by high-throughput gene sequencing. And the correlation of gene mutations with the age of patients was analyzed.
Results: The positive rate of total gene mutation was 87.39% (97/111) in 111 patients, and 231 mutations in 28 different genes were detected in the patients with positive gene mutation. The patients of mutation-positive group were significantly older than that of the mutation-negative group (P<0.001). Among the mutation-positive patients, the mutation rate in the senile group (≥60 years) was 100% (14/14), followed by 89.04% (74/85) in the adult group (15-59 years) and 75% (9/12) in the children group (≤14 years). The average number of mutations in the children group, the adult group and the senile group were respectively 1.44, 2.47 and 2.5; the number of mutations in the adult group was greater than that in the children group (P<0.05).The most common mutations in the children group occurred in signal transduction gene (46.15%, 6/13); The most common mutations in both the adult group (22.40%, 41/183) and the senile group (34.29%, 12/35) occurred in epigenetic regulatory gene; the mutation rate of transcription factor gene in the senile group was higher than that in the children group (50.00% vs 8.33%) (P<0.05); the mutation rates of the splicing factor gene in the adult group and the senile group were higher than that in the children group (44.71% vs 8.33%) (P<0.05), (47.06% vs 8.33%) (P<0.05).
Conclusion: The tumor-associated somatic gene mutations in patients with MDS and MDS/AML are significantly different between the different age groups, especially the children group and the adults group as well as the senile group, suggesting that the occurrence of MDS in children may involve genetic factors that are significantly different from those of adults and the senile.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.19746/j.cnki.issn.1009-2137.2020.02.035 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!