Mutations indicate predisposition to blood cancers
“The fact that both teams converged on strikingly similar findings, using very different approaches and looking at DNA from very different sets of patients, has given us great confidence in the results,” said study author Giulio Genovese, PhD, of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Next steps
The researchers emphasized that there is no clinical benefit today for testing for this pre-malignant state, as there are no treatments currently available that would address this condition in otherwise healthy people.
However, they said the results open the door to entirely new directions for research, toward early detection and even prevention of hematologic malignancies.
“The results demonstrate a way to identify high-risk cohorts—people who are at much higher than average risk of progressing to cancer—which could be a population for clinical trials of future prevention strategies,” Dr McCarroll said. “The abundance of these mutated cells could also serve as a biomarker—like LDL cholesterol is for cardiovascular disease—to test the effects of potential prevention therapies in clinical trials.”
Dr Ebert added, “A new focus of investigation will now be to develop interventions that might decrease the likelihood that individuals with these mutations will go on to develop overt malignancies, or therapeutic strategies to decrease mortality from other conditions that may be instigated by these mutations.”
This research is set to be presented on December 9 at the 56th ASH Annual Meeting in San Francisco.