Leukemia. 2018 Mar 23. doi: 10.1038/s41375-018-0107-z. [Epub ahead of print]
GIPSS: genetically inspired prognostic scoring system for primary myelofibrosis.
Tefferi A1, Guglielmelli P2, Nicolosi M3, Mannelli F2, Mudireddy M3, Bartalucci N2, Finke CM3, Lasho TL3, Hanson CA4, Ketterling RP5, Begna KH3, Naseema Gangat3, Pardanani A3, Vannucchi AM2.
Abstract
International collaborations over the years have produced a series of prognostic models for primary myelofibrosis (PMF), including the recently unveiled mutation-enhanced international prognostic scoring systems for transplant-age patients (MIPSS70 and MIPSS70-plus). In the current study, we considered the feasibility of a genetically inspired prognostic scoring system (GIPSS) that is exclusively based on genetic markers. Among 641 cytogenetically annotated patients with PMF and informative for previously recognized adverse mutations, multivariable analysis identified "VHR" karyotype, "unfavorable" karyotype, absence of type 1/like CALR mutation and presence of ASXL1, SRSF2, or U2AF1Q157 mutation, as inter-independent predictors of inferior survival; the respective HRs (95% CI) were 3.1 (2.1-4.3), 2.1 (1.6-2.7), 2.1 (1.6-2.9), 1.8 (1.5-2.3), 2.4 (1.9-3.2), and 2.4 (1.7-3.3). Based on HR-weighted risk points, a four-tiered GIPSS model was devised: low (zero points; n = 58), intermediate-1 (1 point; n = 260), intermediate-2 (2 points; n = 192), and high (≥3 points; n = 131); the respective median (5-year) survivals were 26.4 (94%), 8.0 (73%), 4.2 (40%), and 2 (14%) years; the model was internally validated by bootstrapping and its predictive accuracy was shown to be comparable to that of MIPSS70-plus. GIPPS offers a low-complexity prognostic tool for PMF that is solely dependent on genetic risk factors and, thus, forward-looking in its essence.
- PMID:
- 29654267
- DOI:
- 10.1038/s41375-018-0107-z
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