Mounting studies have sought to identify novel mutation biomarkers having diagnostic and prognostic potentials. Nevertheless, the understanding of the mutated pathways related to development and prognosis of B-cell lymphoma is still lacking. We aimed to comprehensively analyze the mutation alterations in genes of canonical signaling pathways and their impacts on the clinic outcomes of patients with B-cell lymphoma.
Circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) samples from 79 patients with B-cell lymphomas were used for targeted sequencing with a 560-gene panel for depicting mutation landscapes and identifying gene fusion events. Gene ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) functional enrichment analyses of mutated genes were performed. The associations of mutation status of genes and seven canonical oncogenic pathways with progression-free survival (PFS) were assessed using Kaplan-Meier test and multivariate Cox analysis. The variant allele frequencies (VAFs) of genes in TP53 and Hippo pathways in paired baseline and post-treatment samples from 18 B-cell lymphoma patients were compared. Finally, the associations of identified fusion genes, mutated genes, and pathways with treatment response were evaluated based on objective response rates (ORRs) comparisons of groups.
We identified 666 mutations from 262 genes in baseline cfDNAs from 79 B-cell lymphoma patients, and found some genes were preferentially mutated in our cohort such as