J 2021

Cytogenetic and molecular aberrations and worse outcome for male patients in systemic mastocytosis

KLUIN-NELEMANS, H.C., M. JAWHAR, A. REITER, B. VAN ANROOIJ, J. GOTLIB et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Cytogenetic and molecular aberrations and worse outcome for male patients in systemic mastocytosis

Authors

KLUIN-NELEMANS, H.C., M. JAWHAR, A. REITER, B. VAN ANROOIJ, J. GOTLIB, K. HARTMANN, A. ILLERHAUS, H.N.G.O. ELBERINK, A. GORSKA, M. NIEDOSZYTKO, M. LANGE, L. SCAFFIDI, R. ZANOTTI, P. BONADONNA, C. PERKINS, C. ELENA, L. MALCOVATI, K. SHOUMARIYEH, N. VON BUBNOFF, S. MULLER, M. TRIGGIANI, R. PARENTE, J. SCHWAAB, M. KUNDI, A.B. FORTINA, F. CAROPPO, K. BROCKOW, A. ZINK, D. FUCHS, I. ANGELOVA-FISCHER, A,S. YAVUZ, Michael DOUBEK (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), M. MATTSSON, H. HAGGLUND, J. PANSE, A. SIMONOWSKI, V. SABATO, T. SCHUG, M. JENTZSCH, C. BREYNAERT, J. VARKONYI, V. KENNEDY, O. HERMINE, J. ROSSIGNOL, M. AROCK, P. VALENT and W.R. SPERR

Edition

Theranostics, Lake Haven, Ivyspring International Publisher, 2021, 1838-7640

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

30204 Oncology

Country of publisher

Australia

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

References:

URL

Impact factor

Impact factor: 11.600

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14740/21:00121919

Organization unit

Central European Institute of Technology

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.51872

UT WoS

000582957500019

Keywords in English

Mastocytosis; sex difference; cytogenetics; molecular mutations; survival

Tags

rivok

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 11/4/2022 15:05, Mgr. Natálie Hílek

Abstract

V originále

In systemic mastocytosis (SM), the clinical features and survival vary greatly. Patient-related factors determining the outcome in SM are largely unknown. Methods: We examined the impact of sex on the clinical features, progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS) in 3403 patients with mastocytosis collected in the registry of the European Competence Network on Mastocytosis (ECNM). The impact of cytogenetic and molecular genetic aberrations on sex differences was analyzed in a subset of patients. Results: Of all patients enrolled, 55.3% were females. However, a male predominance was found in a subset of advanced SM (AdvSM) patients, namely SM with an associated hematologic neoplasm (SM-AHN, 70%; p < 0.001). Correspondingly, organomegaly (male: 23% vs. female: 13%, p = 0.007) was more, whereas skin involvement (male: 71% vs. female: 86%, p = 0.001) was less frequent in males. In all patients together, OS (p < 0.0001) was significantly inferior in males, and also within the WHO sub-categories indolent SM, aggressive SM (ASM) and SM-AHN. PFS was significantly (p = 0.0002) worse in males when all patients were grouped together; due to low numbers of events, this significance persisted only in the subcategory smoldering SM. Finally, prognostically relevant cytogenetic abnormalities (10% vs. 5%, p = 0.006) or molecular aberrations (SRSF2/ASXLI/RUNXI profile; 63% vs. 40%, p = 0.003) were more frequently present in males. Conclusions: Male sex has a major impact on clinical features, disease progression, and survival in mastocytosis. Male patients have an inferior survival, which seems related to the fact that they more frequently develop a multi-mutated AdvSM associated with a high-risk molecular background.
Displayed: 12/11/2024 04:07