Jayastu Senapati,Samuel Urrutia,Sanam Loghavi,Nicholas J. Short,Ghayas C. Issa,Abhishek Maiti,Hussein A. Abbas,Naval Daver,Naveen Pemmaraju,Sherry Pierce,Kelly S. Chien,Koji Sasaki,Tapan M. Kadia,Danielle Hammond,Gautam Borthakur,Keyur P. Patel,Farhad Ravandi,Hagop M. Kantarjian,Guillermo Garcia‐Manero,Courtney D. DiNardo
出处
期刊:Blood [American Society of Hematology] 日期:2023-07-13卷期号:142 (19): 1647-1657被引量:24
Mutations in splicing factor (SF) genes SRSF2, U2AF1, SF3B1, and ZRSR2 are now considered adverse risk in the European LeukemiaNet 2022 acute myeloid leukemia (AML) risk stratification. The prognostic impact of SF mutations in AML has been predominantly derived from younger patients treated with intensive (INT) therapy. We evaluated 994 patients with newly diagnosed AML, including 266 (27%) with a SFmut. Median age was 67 years overall, with patients with SFmut being older at 72 years. SRSF2 (n = 140, 53%) was the most common SFmut. In patients treated with INT, median relapse-free survival (RFS) (9.6 vs 21.4 months, P = .04) and overall survival (OS) (15.9 vs 26.7 months, P = .06) were shorter for patients with SFmut than without SFwt, however this significance abrogated when evaluating patients who received venetoclax with INT therapy (RFS 15.4 vs 20.3 months, P = .36; OS 19.6 vs 30.7 months, P = .98). In patients treated with LI, median RFS (9.3 vs 7.7 months, P = .35) and OS (12.3 vs 8.5 months, P = .14) were similar for patients with and without SFmut , and outcomes improved in all groups with venetoclax. On multivariate analysis, SFmut did not affect hazards of relapse and death for INT arm but reduced both these hazards in LI arm. In a large AML data set with >60% of patients receiving venetoclax with LI/INT therapy, SFmut had no independent negative prognostic impact. Newer prognostic models that consider LI therapy and use of venetoclax among other factors are warranted.