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Molecular and Clinical Analysis of Bone Marrow Failure: A Secondary Research Study

Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Bone Marrow Failure Disorders
Myelodysplastic Syndromes
VEXAS Syndrome
Hemoglobinurea, Paroxysmal
Bone Marrow Diseases
Registration Number
NCT07102849
Lead Sponsor
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Brief Summary

STUDY DESCRIPTION:

Bone marrow failure can result from immune mediated attack on stem cells or from inherited genetic defects such as telomere biology disorders or Fanconi anemia. Aplastic anemia (AA), a prototype of bone marrow failure syndromes (BMFS), can be acquired or inherited. Acquired BMFS have common immune mediated pathophysiology, and include AA, lower risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS, particularly hypoMDS), VEXAS, large granular lymphocytosis (LGL), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), pure red cell aplasia (PRCA), or cytopenia of undetermined origin. Clonality is frequent in patients with BMFS. Patients with acquired AA are known to have somatic mutations in phosphatidylinositol glycan class A (PIGA), BCL6 corepressor (BCOR) and HLA genes, which are all related to the immune mediated pathophysiology and good predictors of treatment and overall outcomes. Others such as ASXL1, RUNX1, and splicing factor mutations and/or chromosome 7 aneuploidy are associated with secondary myeloid neoplasms in these patients. Somatic mutations in STAT, DNMT3A and TET2 are prevalent in many other BMFS, such as LGL and VEXAS. Except for acquired AA, the clonal dynamics and trajectories, and cooccurrence of these aberrations in other BMFS are poorly understood. How these clonal events interact with epigenetic and proteomic changes are also unknown. In addition, the role of novel genetic defects in marrow failure is poorly characterized, such as mutations associated with inborn errors of immunity or complement pathways. Our aim is to elucidate this further using multi-omics, bulk/single cell DNA and RNA techniques as well as understand the epigenetics using ATAC-seq, and proteomics. The translation work will be correlated with clinical outcomes and laboratory parameters of patients with the particular BMFS cohort being investigated.

OBJECTIVES:

Primary Objective: To characterize the molecular aberrations in BMFS and to understand how clonality, epigenetics, and proteomics contribute to hematopoiesis over the course of disease using high resolution multi-omics characterization of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC), immune cells and other cellular composition in peripheral blood and bone marrow samples.

Secondary Objectives:

* To correlate the molecular findings with disease presentation and clinical outcomes (response to treatment, clonal evolution to secondary myeloid neoplasm, survival)

* To correlate molecular findings with clinical laboratory data, cytokine, chemokine, soluble receptor levels and growth factors

* To correlate findings with peripheral or marrow flow cytometry phenotyping

* To correlate findings on this study with already performed germline or somatic mutational data

* To compare the genomic, epigenomic and proteomic findings with healthy age matched controls

Detailed Description

STUDY DESCRIPTION:

Bone marrow failure can result from immune mediated attack on stem cells or from inherited genetic defects such as telomere biology disorders or Fanconi anemia. Aplastic anemia (AA), a prototype of bone marrow failure syndromes (BMFS), can be acquired or inherited. Acquired BMFS have common immune mediated pathophysiology, and include AA, lower risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS, particularly hypoMDS), VEXAS, large granular lymphocytosis (LGL), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), pure red cell aplasia (PRCA), or cytopenia of undetermined origin. Clonality is frequent in patients with BMFS. Patients with acquired AA are known to have somatic mutations in phosphatidylinositol glycan class A (PIGA), BCL6 corepressor (BCOR) and HLA genes, which are all related to the immune mediated pathophysiology and good predictors of treatment and overall outcomes. Others such as ASXL1, RUNX1, and splicing factor mutations and/or chromosome 7 aneuploidy are associated with secondary myeloid neoplasms in these patients. Somatic mutations in STAT, DNMT3A and TET2 are prevalent in many other BMFS, such as LGL and VEXAS. Except for acquired AA, the clonal dynamics and trajectories, and cooccurrence of these aberrations in other BMFS are poorly understood. How these clonal events interact with epigenetic and proteomic changes are also unknown. In addition, the role of novel genetic defects in marrow failure is poorly characterized, such as mutations associated with inborn errors of immunity or complement pathways. Our aim is to elucidate this further using multi-omics, bulk/single cell DNA and RNA techniques as well as understand the epigenetics using ATAC-seq, and proteomics. The translation work will be correlated with clinical outcomes and laboratory parameters of patients with the particular BMFS cohort being investigated.

OBJECTIVES:

Primary Objective: To characterize the molecular aberrations in BMFS and to understand how clonality, epigenetics, and proteomics contribute to hematopoiesis over the course of disease using high resolution multi-omics characterization of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC), immune cells and other cellular composition in peripheral blood and bone marrow samples.

Secondary Objectives:

* To correlate the molecular findings with disease presentation and clinical outcomes (response to treatment, clonal evolution to secondary myeloid neoplasm, survival)

* To correlate molecular findings with clinical laboratory data, cytokine, chemokine, soluble receptor levels and growth factors

* To correlate findings with peripheral or marrow flow cytometry phenotyping

* To correlate findings on this study with already performed germline or somatic mutational data

* To compare the genomic, epigenomic and proteomic findings with healthy age matched controls

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1400
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Detection of molecular aberrations in marrow failurebaseline

To characterize the molecular aberrations in marrow failure and to understand how clonality, epigenetics, and proteomics contribute to hematopoiesis over the course of disease using high resolution multi-omics characterization of HSPC, immune cells and other cellular composition in peripheral blood and bone marrow samples.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

National Institutes of Health Clinical Center

🇺🇸

Bethesda, Maryland, United States

National Institutes of Health Clinical Center
🇺🇸Bethesda, Maryland, United States
NIH Clinical Center Office of Patient Recruitment (OPR)
Contact
800-411-1222
ccopr@nih.gov

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