Research Update End-Year 2 CHF-02317: The Role of Complex Translocations Associated with TP53 Somatic Mutations for Aiding Prognosis of Canine Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma

Research Update from Dr. Breen regarding aiding prognosis of Canine Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma.

This study involves the evaluation of a cohort of canine lymphoma specimens for the presence of tumor-associated abnormalities associated with four key cancer-associated genes (MYC, BCL6, BCL2 and TP53). The presence of these abnormalities, alone and in combination, has been shown to be predictive of the response to standard treatment modalities in human lymphoma patients, and provides powerful opportunities to predict prognosis in newly diagnosed patients. We hypothesize that the same may apply in dogs.

We have screened the full cohort of canine lymphoma cases for structural and numerical abnormalities involving MYC, BCL6, and BCL2. Overall the data suggest that rearrangement of the genome at the MYC and BCL6 loci is relatively rare within any given case, and occurs at a frequency similar to what is seen in human DLBCL (Li et al. 2018). While BCL2 rearrangement is highly infrequent in dogs (seen in only 2% of cases), and has a generally neutral copy number status, our initial analysis suggests an association with disease-free interval. In an earlier study we showed that the incidence of BCL2 rearrangement and copy number imbalance is low in canine follicular lymphoma (Thomas et al. 2017). The rarity of this B-cell lymphoma subtype in the dog limited the ability to draw generalized comparisons with the human counterpart; however the present study suggests that these observations can be extended to other more common canine B-cell lymphomas.

Analysis to date suggests that neither BCL6 nor MYC rearrangement is significantly associated with disease free interval. Assessment of the copy number status of both of these loci concur with previous studies (Thomas et al. 2011), with MYC demonstrating a slight copy number gain and BCL6 demonstrating largely neutral copy number status. DNA sequencing analysis of the TP53 gene has revealed a diverse series of variants among those cases analyzed to date, the majority of which are clustered within a small genomic interval. Almost all variants are simple in structure but are predicted to have a deleterious effect on the function of the gene. We identified variants for which the equivalent alteration is highly recurrent in human tumors, including two key variants that have been reported previously in canine lymphomas, adding to their potential clinical significance.

End-Year-2 Research Update Dr. Breen aiding prognosis of Canine Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma.