High risk and silent clonal hematopoietic genotypes in patients with non-hematologic cancer.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Clonal hematopoiesis (CH) identified by somatic gene variants with variant allele fraction (VAF) >= 2% is associated with an increased risk of hematologic malignancy. However, CH defined by a broader set of genotypes and lower VAFs is ubiquitous in older individuals. To improve our understanding of the relationship between CH genotype and risk of hematologic malignancy we analyzed data from 42,714 patients who underwent blood sequencing as a normal comparator for non-hematologic tumor testing using a large cancer-related gene panel. We cataloged hematologic malignancies in this cohort using natural language processing and manual curation of medical records. We found that some CH genotypes including JAK2, RUNX1, and XPO1 variants were associated with high hematologic malignancy risk. Chronic disease was predicted better than acute disease suggesting the influence of length bias. To better understand the implications of hematopoietic clonality independent of mutational function, we evaluated a set of silent synonymous and non-coding mutations. We found that silent CH, particularly when multiple variants were present or VAF was high, was associated with increased risk of hematologic malignancy. We tracked expansion of CH mutations in 26 hematologic malignancies sequenced with the same platform. JAK2 and TP53 VAF consistently expanded at disease onset while DNMT3A and silent CH VAFs mostly decreased. These data inform the clinical and biological interpretation of CH in the context of non-hematologic cancer.