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Written in Blood of BCOR/BCORL1 mutations in the clonal hierarchy,” they added. Mutation profiles also differed among patients with –7/del(7q). For example, –7/del(7q) was a characteristic feature of sMDS that evolved from AA (present in 63% of patients), whereas only 14 percent of patients with pMDS had the mutation (p value not provided). TP53 mutations appeared to be more common in pMDS with –7/del(7q), but ASXL1, RUNX1, TET2, and SETBP1 mutations “appeared to be over-represented” in sMDS with –7/ del(7q). The difference was only statisti- cally significant for RUNX1 (p=0.003) because of low numbers of events, the authors reported. The researchers then analyzed a cohort of 21 patients with AA, eight of whom progressed to sMDS, finding that mutations were observed more frequently in progressors than non-progressors (50% vs. 8%; p=0.048). Progressors also had a higher average number of mutations than non-progressors (3.4 vs. 0.7; p=0.005). These data suggest “that certain clonal events seen in MDS stage of the disease are indeed acquired early at presentation of AA and that some early hits may lead to subsequent clonal evolution,” the authors wrote, adding that ASXL1, U2AF1, and JAK2 found at AA presentation were also observed in MDS progressors. Finally, to assess the potential impact of somatic mutations on treatment outcomes, the researchers analyzed a subset of AA patients (n=37) who received IST. Clonal somatic alterations, which were identified in six of 25 patients who responded and in four of 12 patients who were refractory to IST treatment, did not predict the efficacy of IST, “consistent with the transient nature of most of these events,” the authors wrote. They also found that patients with AA who had any of the mutational hits found both at initial AA presentation and in subsequent MDS (n=4) had a shorter median progression-free survival (2.0 years vs. not reached; p<0.001) and overall survival (2.6 years vs. not reached; p=0.02), compared with patients without somatic alterations (n=67). “While most of these [clonal so- matic] events, found typically in MDS, reflect clonal hematopoiesis and do not occur in or predict sMDS, certain founder mutations can be found at presentation in AA and have potential to initiate progression to sMDS,” the authors concluded. The study is limited by the small number of patients in certain cohort analyses. The authors report no financial conflicts. REFERENCE Negoro E, Nagata Y, Clemente MJ, et al. Origins of myelodysplastic syndromes after aplastic anemia. Blood. 2017 September 11. [Epub ahead of print] 48 ASH Clinical News Early Study Shows Venetoclax Is Active in Patients With Relapsed/R