Pathogenesis of multiple myeloma Doc. RNDr. Sabina Ševčíková, Ph.D. Babak myeloma group ÚPF LF MU Monoclonal gammopathies  Abnormal proteins in serum or urine  These proteins produced by a clone of plasma or lymphoid cells  MGUS  Multiple myeloma  Plasma cell leukemia  Primary amyloidosis  Solitary plasmocytoma  Waldenström macroglobulinemia World Health Organization Adam, 2011 Hematopoesis Plasma cells  Cells that produce antibodies  Usually around 5% in the bone marrow  In MM, they are malignant  Produce monoclonal immunoglobulin= paraprotein Antibodies  To find and destroy foreign objects in the organism  Eliminate pathogen  IgG, IgA, IgM, IgE and IgD  IgG – only one that enters placenta  IgA – produced in mucous membranes, protects entry to body  IgM – produced first after infection – body protection in the first few days  IgE – parasites and allergic reactions  IgD –unclear, co-expressed on surface of mature B cells Basic structure of immunoglobulin MGUS  Precancerosis  In people over 50 – 3-4%  Risk of progression into MM > 1% every year Multiple myeloma  Second most common hematological malignancy  10% of hematological malignancies  Median age at diagnosis 65  Incidence 5.7/100 000  More common in men  Infiltration of bone marrow by malignant PC  Osteolytic lesions  Presence of M-Ig in serum and/or urine Hájek, 2012 Anderson, 2011 PCL  Most aggressive monoclonal gammopathy  Incidence 0.04/100 000  More than 20% of circulating PC and more than 2x109/L  Median age at diagnosis - 52  Median survival 1.5 years or shorter Primary amylodosis  Amyloid deposits in organs  Production of abnormal protein filaments  Rare  May be present together with MM  Survival around 40 months Solitary plasmocytoma  Solitary lesion of abnormal PC  Without bone marrow involvement  Without osteolytic lesions  Risk of progression into MM – 10% in 3 years Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia  Affects lymphocytoplasmoid cells (cells with characteristics of both PC and lymphoid cells)  Production of large amount of IgM  Very rare  May progress from IgM MGUS Multiple myeloma History of MM Capasso, 2005 Male skull from the bronze age with MM characteristics History of MM  1844 – first documented case – Sarah Newbury (Dr. Solly) Kyle et Rajkumar, 2008 destruction of sternum fractures of bones destruction of femur History of MM  1845 – presence of proteins in urine of patients (Bence Jones – Bence Jones protein)  Kahler’s disease – Prague physician Otto Kahler Kyle et Rajkumar, 2008 Pathogenesis of MM  Multistep transformation Špička, 2005 Healthy bone marrow MM bone marrow www.pathologyatlas.com Multiple myeloma the clinician’s viewpoint (doc. Minařík FNOl) Causes of MM  Unknown but  Decrease of immunity dependent on age  Hormonal changes  Chemicals  Radiation   changes leading to unstable genome of PC Manifestation of MM  1) bone marrow:   ery  anemia   leukocytes  decrease of immunity   thrombocytes  bleeding Manifestation of MM  2) osteolytic lesions:  Bone pain  Weakening of bone structures  Spontaneous fractures  Calcium increase in serum Manifestation of MM  3) Defects in immunoglobulins - paraprotein:  Hyperviscosity  Accumulation in blood vessels  Decrease in proper function of immunity Diagnosis of MM  Difficult, not specific (pain, weakness, repeated infections, tiredness – similar to other diseases) 1) Number of MM cells in the BM 2) Presence of abnormal proteins in blood/urine 3) Typical bone changes Diagnostic methods  Blood and urine test – electrophoresis of proteins  Sampling and analysis of bone marrow  Imaging – X-rays, CT, MRI, PET-CT, bone density Diagnostic methods - general  Various indirect parameters:  Blood count  Calcium levels  Kidney function  Levels of antibodies  Liver function  Bone metabolism Diagnostic methods- special  Beta-2-macroglobulin  Cytogenetics  FACS  MM cell proliferation  Antiangiogenic cytokines  Free light chain ratio  Albumin  Staging Staging and course of disease  3 stages of disease  I-III – level of disease  A/B kidney function  Course – individual, varies  From light form of disease to kidney failure, broken vertebrae, immune deficiency, bleeding…. MM treatment  Orange peel and opioids  Chemotherapy  Transplants  Immunomodulatory drugs  Proteasome inhibitors Hájek, 2012 Anderson, 2011 MM prognosis  Untreated patients survive 14 months  Standard therapy – 3-4 years  Transplants – 6-7 years  New drugs – 5-year survival for more than 80% of pts Hájek, 2012 Chemotherapy and transplants  Treatment protocol Junior – Senior  Melphalan  Alkylating agent  Prednisone  Glucocorticoid – apoptosis of heme cells  Transplants since 1957  Autologous – up to 65, even tandem  Allogeneic – in clinical trials Hájek, 2012 Anderson, 2011 Treatment options in MM  IMIDs  Proteasome inhibitors Treatment options in MM  IMIDs  Proteasome inhibitors Thalidomide  1953- Chemie Grünenthal  1957- distribution  Sedative  Morning sickness  Teratogenic properties  Only tested on rats  About 10 000 children born – only about 40% survived  FDA - Dr. Francis Kelsey Sedlaříková, 2012 White House Archive Thalidomide  1964 – Jason Sheskin – leprosy patient  1993- Judah Folkman – angiogenesis in hematology  1994 – Bart Barlogie - refractory MM, thalidomide  Clinical study – 84 pts, 1/3 of pts response  2006 – FDA – approval  Unpleasant side effects - neuropathy Sedlaříková, 2012  Analogues of thalidomide – lenalidomide a pomalidomide  Pleiotropic effect on MM:  T-cell co-stimulation  Antiangiogenic properties  Anti-inflammatory properties  Apoptosis and cell cycle progression  Inhibition of MM and BM interactions IMIDs immunomodulatory drugs Sedlaříková, 2012 Treatment options in MM  IMIDs  Proteasome inhibitors Treatment options in MM  IMIDs  Proteasome inhibitors Proteasome inhibitors  Very successful treatment of MM  Tumor cells very sensitive to proteasome inhibitor  Increased proliferation  Increased protein synthesis and protein degradation  Affect:  Cell cycle  Induction of apoptosis  Stress response  Various signaling pathways Kubiczková, 2014 Effect of proteasome inhibitors on BM microenvironment  Cell signaling – apoptosis  Inhibit cell adhesion, angiogenesis, interactions Kubiczková, 2014 New drugs increase life but do not cure…..yet Thalidomid (Myrin) Bortezomib (Velcade) Lenalidomid (Revlimid) Carfilzomib ˃ Bortezomib Carfilzomib+Revlimid˃ Revlimid  New proteasome inhibitors:  Carfilzomib (Kyprolis)  Ixazomib (Ninlaro)  Monoclonal antibodies:  Daratumumab (Darzalex)  Elotuzumab (Empliciti)  Perspective for newly diagnosed:  Early diagnostics → early treatment (new criteria 2014)  New combinations of drugs New drugs- new hope What you can buy for 1 year of treatment: Myrin Velcade/ Bortezomib Revlimid Imnovid Differences in treatment Before Treatment After others MM Multiple myeloma the molecular part MM pathogenesis  Unknown  Genetic predisposition – close relatives - 6 times risk  Pesticides, herbicides, radiation  Mutations in PC  Changes in BM microenvironment – PC growth Hájek, 2012 Anderson, 2011 MM pathogenesis Cytogenetic mutations Dysregulation of cyclins, oncogenes, supressors Loss of immune surveillance Immunosuppression Cytokines Cytokines Hájek, 2014 Flowcytometry  MM diagnosis - CD19-CD56+CD38+CD138+  Risk of progression from MGUS to MM  Detection of MRD – higher PFS and OS in MRD - pts Hájek, 2012 Anderson, 2011 Říhová, 2013 Cytogenetic aberrations in MM  Unstable genome – deletions, amplifications translocations  Changes accumulate in time  Numerical and structural changes of chromosomes  Aneuploidy of odd chromosomes and translocation of IgH locus Palumbo, 2013 Anderson, 2011 Kuglík, 2012 Němec, 2012 Numerical aberrations in MM  Non-hyperdiploid (48 < >74) x hyperdiploid (48-74)  Hyperdiploid:  Trisomies of 3,5,7,9,11,15,19,21 – better prognosis  Non-hyperdiploid:  Monosomies of 8,13,14,16,17,22 Palumbo, 2013 Anderson, 2011 Kuglík, 2012 Němec, 2012 Structural aberrations  Translocations of locus 14q32 (IgH)  Primary changes:  t(11;14) 15-20% cyclin D1  t(4;14) 10-15% FGFR3/MMSET  t(14;16) 2-10% c-MAF  t(6;14) 5% cyclin D3  Secondary changes:  Complex karyotypes - MYC  Deletion or duplication of 1q21  Deletion or monosomy of chr 13  Deletion of chr 17 – deletion of TP53 Palumbo, 2013 Anderson, 2011 Kuglík, 2012 Němec, 2012 FISH  Most MM cells do not cycle – classical cytogenetics basically useless  i-FISH – much better results  Prognosis – t(4;14), t(14;16), t(14;20) and del (17p) – bad prognosis Kuglík, 2012 Němec, 2012 Bešše, 2015 Diagnostics  Bone marrow biopsies  Painful, unethical to repeat too often  New marker? Liquid biopsies? Why liquid biopsies? Limitations of classic biopsies  Invasive  Painful  One site of tumor – heterogeneity not represented  In MM – presence of subclones in focal lesions Liquid biopsies  Biopsies of PB  Detection of circulating tumor cells  Detection of circulating nucleic acids  Easier sampling  Entire heterogeneity of the tumor Liquid biopsies Crowley et al 2013 healthy tissue inflammation tumor Circulating PC (cPC)  Prognostic marker  Loss of dependence on BM microenvironment  Changes of adhesion molecules, chemokines, aberrations  Faster progression MGUS to MM  Higher BM infiltration in MM  Negative prognostic marker in refractory MM  5-20% cPC – worse survival regardless of age  > 5% cPC – prognosis like PCL Which molecules? KO suplementum 2017 Non-coding RNAs  Less than 1.5% of human genome codes for proteins  More than 90% is transcribed  Most common non coding RNAs : rRNA, tRNA (Sana, 2012)  Basic division:  Short ncRNA < 200 bp < long ncRNA Circulating ncRNA  Body fluids  Stable and resistant to RNAses  Easily accessible  Cell communications  Diagnostics  Relapse monitoring  MRD monitoring http://circresearch.com/gallery/tag/circulating-mirna/ New markers for MM  MicroRNA  Cell-free DNA New markers for MM  MicroRNA  Cell-free DNA microRNA  Short noncoding RNAs  20-22 nt long  Post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression  Physiological processes (proliferation, differentiation)  Tumorigenesis Lee, 1993 Calin, 2002 History of miRNA  Identified in 1993 in C. elegans  Lin-4 – larval stages of C. elegans  About 1/3 of human genes regulated by miRNA  About 2200 of human miRNA  miR-15a and miR-16 identified in region 13q14 – potential oncogenes in CLL Lee, 1993 Calin, 2002 Circulating miRNA http://circresearch.com/gallery/tag/circulating-mirna/ Exosomes  50-140 nm vesicles  Proteins, NA  Active secretion from cells  Change gene expression, signaling in cells  Remove chemo from cells actively  Support tuorigenesis – miRNA transport Our pilot study  4 miRNA chosen based on MM pathogenesis  Their presence analyzed in serum of PB  miR-410 – locus 14q32 – MM translocation  miR-660 – aberrant expression in MM  miR-142-5p – aberrant expression in MGUS and MM  miR-29a – increased expression in PC Ševčíková, 2012 Results of pilot study  miR-29a increased in MM  Specificity 70%, sensitivity 88%, AUC=0.832 Ševčíková, 2012 Circulating miRNA as MG markers  MM, MGUS and HD  103 MM at diagnosis  18 MM at relapse  57 MGUS  30 HD Kubiczková, 2014 Methods TaqMan Low Density Arrays Differential expression analysis qPCR Specific TaqMan miRNA assaysData analysis miRNA isolation Correlation with clinically important parameters  miR-744, miR-130a, miR-34a, let-7d, let-7e deregulated in MG vs HD  Combination of miR-34a and let-7e: MM vs HD vs MGUS  No correlation with PC in BM – other pathological changes in MM? Kubiczková, 2014 Circulating miRNA as MG markers Low levels of miR-744 and let-7e shorter OS Kubiczková, 2014 New markers for MM  MicroRNA  Cell-free DNA Cell-free DNA  Short fragments of DNA (180 bp) in PB  First described in 1949 (Mandel et Métais)  1977 – described in tumor patients (Leon et al)  Higher levels in pts than controls  Higher levels in metastases  Lower levels after radiotherapy  1994 – cfDNA carrying RAS mutation in MDS  Used in prenatal diagnostics cfDNA levels  Physiologically low (10-100 ng/ml)  Change of quantity and quality in pathology  Higher levels (1000 ng/ml) in tumors, inflammations – but not diagnostic http://biomarkerinsights.qiagen.com/2016/08/17 How are cfDNA released from cells?  Apoptosis  Necrosis (tumor cells)  Active release (cell signaling) Schwarzenbach et al 2014 Our cfDNA project  Detect a patient specific VDJ rearrangement of the IgH locus in BM  Check the rearrangement in cfDNA  Follow the dynamics of the molecules after treatment  Analyzed 85 pts, follow up up to 2 years after start of treatment Summary - cfDNA  cfDNA carry various reaarangments  Possible to follow MRD in MM? Summary  MM disease of older people  New drugs dramatically improved survival  Need more specific easily accessible markers  Several possibilities – miRNA, cfDNA, lncRNA…  Improvement in diagnostics and follow-up of patients Liquid biopsies in the future?  PB biopsies – all heterogeneity of the tumor  Less painful  Several molecules  Great potential Acknowledgments Babákova myelomová skupina, Ústav patologické fyziologie, Lékařská fakulta, MU Sabina Ševčíková Veronika Kubaczková Lenka Sedlaříková Božena Bollová Martina Valachová Jana Gregorová Veronika Kelbichová Kamila Novosadová Oddělení klinické hematologie, Fakultní nemocnice Brno Miroslav Penka Martina Almáši Renata Bezděková Božena Hanáková Lucie Říhová Barbora Sáblíková Renata Suská Pavla Všianská Interní hematologická a onkologická klinika Fakultní nemocnice Brno Zdeněk Adam Marta Krejčí Luděk Pour Viera Sandecká Martin Štork Institut biostatistiky a analýz LF MU Jiří Jarkovský Lucie Brožová Oddělení klinické hematologie Fakultní nemocnice Ostrava Roman Hájek Tomáš Jelínek Fedor Kryukov Elena Kryukova Zuzana Kufová Laboratoř molekulární cytogenetiky Ústav experimentální biologie, PřF MU Petr Kuglík Aneta Mikulášová Jan Smetana Markéta Wayhelová Ústav patologické fyziologie Lékařská fakulta, MU Anna Vašků Thanks for your attention