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ASH 2024: Discovery of gene linked to high-altitude adaptation may transform blood cancer care

16 Dec 2024
ASH 2024: Discovery of gene linked to high-altitude adaptation may transform blood cancer care

Two researchers from Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah (the U) have discovered a gene variant found in high-altitude Andean populations that they believe could be a new biomarker for predicting the severity of diseases and treatment responses for certain types of blood cancer.

Jihyun Song, PhD, investigator at Huntsman Cancer Institute and assistant professor in the division of Haematology & Hematologic Malignancies at the U, and Josef Prchal, MD, investigator at Huntsman Cancer Institute and the Charles A.Nugent, MD, and Margaret Nugent Endowed Professorship in Medicine/Haematology at the U, presented their findings in the late-breaking abstract sessions at the 66th Annual Meeting and Exposition of the American Society of Haematology.

This is a special honour, given that only the top six late-breaking abstracts are selected for presentation each year.

“This is the first study to show how genetic traits related to living at high altitudes can affect disease and treatment outcomes,” says Song.

“Our findings suggest that this NFKB1 gene variant could help predict inflammation levels and treatment success.”

Prchal and Song’s research is drawn from a years-long genomic study of the Aymara, an indigenous population living throughout the Andes Mountains of South America.

NFKB1, in many cases, is a gene that activates inflammation.

Chronic inflammation can lead to abnormal cell growth and cancer.

Around 90% of the Aymara people have an enriched variant of the gene, according to Song and her team, though it is not unique to their population.

It is also present in roughly 30% of Europeans, Hispanics, and Asians.

Song and Prchal recognised that with blood cancers, characterised by increased inflammation, those with the enriched variant of the NFKB1 gene had lower inflammation and better responses to treatment.

This effect of the gene variant could stem from a protective evolutionary measure against blood clots and other inflammatory responses at high altitude.

“The molecular pathway happened to be discovered through research unrelated to cancer but instead by looking at evolutionary accommodation to high altitude,” says Prchal.

“But when we found that this pathway changes inflammation, and that it also happens to be in people who aren’t Aymara, we could quickly use this knowledge to analyse cells we had from our patients.”

Prchal is a renowned expert in the treatment of polycythemia vera, essential thrombocythemia, and other myeloproliferative neoplasms— types of blood cancer that cause the bone marrow to produce too many red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets, and increase the risk of blood clots.

These diseases may transform into more severe blood diseases, such as myelofibrosis and leukaemia.

“What we found is that 30% of patients with polycythemia vera and essential thrombocythemia are actually better off with the Andean gene variant of NFKB1 than people without,” say Song and Prchal.

“They are all more likely to get complete remission with treatment and may have a better course.”

Song and Prchal hope that the identification of the enriched variant of the NFKB1 gene could lead to drug therapies for myeloproliferative neoplasms that will replicate the variant’s capabilities.

Source: Huntsman Cancer Institute