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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Talk outline
- CLL: Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (background)
- Immunoglobulin V(H) gene mutation
- Overall survival by FISH
- IGHV mutation and cytogenetics
- Genetics of CLL: methods
- CLL has a stable genome
- CLL has more CNAs than germline
- cnLOH / ROH are not increased in CLL
- Higher CNAs in Del 17p compared to other CLL
- Somatic CNAs in 200 CLL patients
- CNAs > 1 associate with shorter TTFT
- CNAs are associated with need for therapy
- 8q24 gains involve MYC
- 3q26 gains involve PIK3CA
- 8p deletion
- 17p- patients exhibit recurrent 3p and 4p losses
- Mutations in protein-coding sequences in CLL
- 25 recurrent drivers in CLL
- Mutations associate with prognostic markers
- Frequency of five most common driver genes
- SF3B1 mutated in 15% of CLLs
- Alternative 3’ splice variants in Mut-SF3B1 CLLs
- SF3B1 mutation predicts poor prognosis
- SF3B1 mutations confer poor prognosis
- NOTCH1 mutations in CLL patients
- NOTCH1 pathway
- NOTCH1 mutation status
- NOTCH1 mutations: short TFS & higher risk RT
- Recurrent mutations refine prognosis
- Integrated mutational and cytogenetic model
- Integrating mutations reclassifies into high risk
- Inferring earlier and later drivers in CLL
- Patterns of clonal evolution
- Stable subpopulation sizes in CLLs w/o therapy
- Frequent clonal evolution in CLLs with therapy
- Subclonal drivers impact clinical outcome
- Summary: somatic landscape in CLL
- Previously untreated CLL
- CLL8 study design
- CLL8: addition of Rituximab to FC (PFS)
- CLL8: addition of Rituximab to FC (OS)
- CLL8: survival after FCR by FISH
- MDACC: TTF after FCR based on FISH
- MDACC: TTP for FCR responders by IGHV & 11q
- Incidence of genetic lesions
- CLL8 multivariable analysis: predictive factors
- CLL8: Impact of TP53 mutation on OS
- CLL8: NOTCH1 as predictive marker
- CLL10 study: FCR vs. BR in front-line
- CLL10 study: response
- CLL10 study: MRD negativity
- CLL10 study: median PFS
- CLL10 study: adverse events
- Multivariate analysis (PFS)
- Multivariate analysis (OS)
- CLL10 study: FCR vs. BR: summary
- FCR300: PFS and OS
- FCR300: PFS by IGHV mutation status
- FCR300: PFS and OS outcomes by MRD status
- First-line treatment of CLL
- Ofatumumab: CDC directed monoclonal antibody
- Ofatumumab + Chlorambucil vs. Chlorambucil only
- Obinutuzumab (GA101): type II anti-CD20 mAb
- CLL11: study design
- CLL11: baseline patient characteristics
- CLL11: adverse events of interest
- CLL11: minimal residual disease (MRD)
- CLL11: progression-free survival
- CLL11: overall survival (GA101)
- CLL11: overall survival (Head-to-head)
Topics Covered
- Somatic genetics of CLL
- Novel prognostics
- Predictive markers
- Frontline therapy
- Clinical trials (study design and outcomes)
Talk Citation
Brown, J.R. (2015, November 30). CLL: novel prognostics, and updates on therapy 1 [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 3, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/GKCE6588.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Jennifer R. Brown has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
CLL: novel prognostics, and updates on therapy 1
Published on November 30, 2015
34 min
A selection of talks on Cancer
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, today,
I'll be presenting a lecture
on Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia,
focused on novel prognostics
and updates on therapy.
0:10
Specifically, this lecture
has three sections.
The first is focused
on the new discoveries
and somatic genetics of CLL
and in particular
how these impact on prognosis
and prediction
of disease response.
The second section will be
on frontline therapy in CLL.
And the third section will be
on relapse therapy in CLL
which, of course, is focused
on the novel targeted
inhibitors of BTK,
PI3-kinase delta.
And we'll also speak
about BCL2 inhibition.
0:39
As a brief overview,
there are about
16,000 new cases of CLL
per year in the United States,
and it's also a very common
disease in Western Europe.
It's the most common
adult leukemia,
and although
it's called a leukemia,
it's really a chronic incurable
mature B cell neoplasm,
making it more related
to mature lymphomas.
Most patients present
with asymptomatic
increases
in their lymphocyte count.
And these asymptomatic patients
do not require
therapy initially.
We typically institute therapy
once symptoms,
low blood counts
or large lymph nodes intervene.
And there are
two key prognostic factors
that have been
identified in work
over the previous 15 years
and validated in many studies.
And these include
the mutational status
of the immunoglobulin
heavy chain gene
and chromosomal abnormalities
identified by FISH.
1:26
So in terms
of the immunoglobulin
variable region
heavy chain gene,
there is a continuum
of the degree
of somatic hypermutation
seen in the variable gene
across patients with CLL.
But it was observed
approximately 15 years ago
that clinically,
there is a cutoff
in terms of the percentage
of somatic hypermutation
that's seen
that associates with outcome.
And that cutoff is approximately
two percent different
from the germline.
Patients with less than
two percent mutation
are called unmutated
and have a median survival
of about nine years
historically,
while those who have
more than two percent alteration
from the closest germline gene
have an extended median survival
in excess of 24 years.