Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Vera Grossmann is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Vera Grossmann.


Leukemia | 2014

Landscape of genetic lesions in 944 patients with myelodysplastic syndromes

Torsten Haferlach; Yasunobu Nagata; Vera Grossmann; Yusuke Okuno; Ulrike Bacher; Genta Nagae; Susanne Schnittger; Masashi Sanada; Ayana Kon; Tamara Alpermann; Kenichi Yoshida; Andreas Roller; Niroshan Nadarajah; Yuichi Shiraishi; Yusuke Shiozawa; Kenichi Chiba; Hidenori Tanaka; Koeffler Hp; H-U Klein; Martin Dugas; Hiroyuki Aburatani; Alexander Kohlmann; Satoru Miyano; Claudia Haferlach; Wolfgang Kern; Seishi Ogawa

High-throughput DNA sequencing significantly contributed to diagnosis and prognostication in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). We determined the biological and prognostic significance of genetic aberrations in MDS. In total, 944 patients with various MDS subtypes were screened for known/putative mutations/deletions in 104 genes using targeted deep sequencing and array-based genomic hybridization. In total, 845/944 patients (89.5%) harbored at least one mutation (median, 3 per patient; range, 0–12). Forty-seven genes were significantly mutated with TET2, SF3B1, ASXL1, SRSF2, DNMT3A, and RUNX1 mutated in >10% of cases. Many mutations were associated with higher risk groups and/or blast elevation. Survival was investigated in 875 patients. By univariate analysis, 25/48 genes (resulting from 47 genes tested significantly plus PRPF8) affected survival (P<0.05). The status of 14 genes combined with conventional factors revealed a novel prognostic model (‘Model-1’) separating patients into four risk groups (‘low’, ‘intermediate’, ‘high’, ‘very high risk’) with 3-year survival of 95.2, 69.3, 32.8, and 5.3% (P<0.001). Subsequently, a ‘gene-only model’ (‘Model-2’) was constructed based on 14 genes also yielding four significant risk groups (P<0.001). Both models were reproducible in the validation cohort (n=175 patients; P<0.001 each). Thus, large-scale genetic and molecular profiling of multiple target genes is invaluable for subclassification and prognostication in MDS patients.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Next-Generation Sequencing Technology Reveals a Characteristic Pattern of Molecular Mutations in 72.8% of Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia by Detecting Frequent Alterations in TET2, CBL, RAS, and RUNX1

Alexander Kohlmann; Vera Grossmann; Hans-Ulrich Klein; Sonja Schindela; Tamara Weiss; Beray Kazak; F Dicker; Susanne Schnittger; Martin Dugas; Wolfgang Kern; Claudia Haferlach; Torsten Haferlach

PURPOSE Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) is a clonal hematopoietic malignancy that is characterized by features of both a myeloproliferative neoplasm and a myelodysplastic syndrome. Thus far, data on a comprehensive cytogenetic or molecular genetic characterization are limited. PATIENTS AND METHODS Here, we analyzed 81 thoroughly characterized patients with CMML (CMML type 1, n = 45; CMML type 2, n = 36) by applying next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology to investigate CBL, JAK2, MPL, NRAS, and KRAS at known mutational hotspot regions. In addition, complete coding regions were analyzed for RUNX1 (beta isoform) and TET2 aberrations. RESULTS Cytogenetic aberrations were found in 18.2% of patients (14 of 77 patients). In contrast, at least one molecular mutation was observed in 72.8% of patients (59 of 81 patients). A mean of 1.6 mutations per patient was observed by this unprecedented screening. In total, 105 variances were detected by this comprehensive molecular screening. After excluding known polymorphisms or silent mutations, 82 distinct mutations remained (CBL, n = 15; JAK2V617F, n = 8; MPL, n = 0; NRAS, n = 10; KRAS, n = 12; RUNX1, n = 7; and TET2, n = 41). With respect to clinical data, a better outcome was seen for patients carrying TET2 mutations (P = .013). CONCLUSION The number of molecular markers used to categorize myeloid neoplasms is constantly increasing. Here, NGS screening has been demonstrated to support a comprehensive characterization of the molecular background in CMML. A pattern of molecular mutations translates into different biologic and prognostic categories of CMML.


Blood | 2012

SRSF2 mutations in 275 cases with chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML)

Manja Meggendorfer; Andreas Roller; Torsten Haferlach; Christiane Eder; Vera Grossmann; Alexander Kohlmann; Tamara Alpermann; Kenichi Yoshida; Seishi Ogawa; H. Phillip Koeffler; Wolfgang Kern; Claudia Haferlach; Susanne Schnittger

We analyzed the mutational hotspot region of SRSF2 (Pro95) in 275 cases with chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML). In addition, ASXL1, CBL, EZH2, JAK2V617F, KRAS, NRAS, RUNX1, and TET2 mutations were investigated in subcohorts. Mutations in SRSF2 (SRSF2mut) were detected in 47% (129 of 275) of all cases. In detail, 120 cases had a missense mutation at Pro95, leading to a change to Pro95His, Pro95Leu, Pro95Arg, Pro95Ala, or Pro95Thr. In 9 cases, 3 new in/del mutations were observed: 7 cases with a 24-bp deletion, 1 case with a 3-bp duplication, and 1 case with a 24-bp duplication. In silico analyses predicted a damaging character for the protein structure of SRSF2 for all mutations. SRSF2mut was correlated with higher age, less pronounced anemia, and normal karyotype. SRSF2mut and EZH2mut were mutually exclusive, but SRSF2mut was associated with TET2mut. In the total cohort, no effect of SRSF2mut on survival was observed. However, in the RUNX1mut subcohort, SRSF2 Pro95His had a favorable effect on overall survival. This comprehensive mutation analysis found that 93% of all patients with CMML carried at least 1 somatic mutation in 9 recurrently mutated genes. In conclusion, these data show the importance of SRSF2mut as new diagnostic marker in CMML.


Blood | 2012

A novel hierarchical prognostic model of AML solely based on molecular mutations

Vera Grossmann; Susanne Schnittger; Alexander Kohlmann; Christiane Eder; Andreas Roller; Christoph Schmid; Clemens-Martin Wendtner; Peter Staib; Hubert Serve; Karl-Anton Kreuzer; Wolfgang Kern; Torsten Haferlach; Claudia Haferlach

The karyotype is so far the most important prognostic parameter in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Molecular mutations have been analyzed to subdivide AML with normal karyotype into prognostic subsets. The aim of this study was to develop a prognostic model for the entire AML cohort solely based on molecular markers. One thousand patients with cytogenetic data were investigated for the following molecular alterations: PML-RARA, RUNX1-RUNX1T1, CBFB-MYH11, FLT3-ITD, and MLL-PTD, as well as mutations in NPM1, CEPBA, RUNX1, ASXL1, and TP53. Clinical data were available in 841 patients. Based on Cox regression and Kaplan-Meier analyses, 5 distinct prognostic subgroups were identified: (1) very favorable: PML-RARA rearrangement (n = 29) or CEPBA double mutations (n = 42; overall survival [OS] at 3 years: 82.9%); (2) favorable: RUNX1-RUNX1T1 (n = 35), CBFB-MYH11 (n = 31), or NPM1 mutation without FLT3-ITD (n = 186; OS at 3 years: 62.6%); (3) intermediate: none of the mutations leading to assignment into groups 1, 2, 4, or 5 (n = 235; OS at 3 years: 44.2%); (4) unfavorable: MLL-PTD and/or RUNX1 mutation and/or ASXL1 mutation (n = 203; OS at 3 years: 21.9%); and (5) very unfavorable: TP53 mutation (n = 80; OS at 3 years: 0%; P < .001). This comprehensive molecular characterization provides a more powerful model for prognostication than cytogenetics.


Blood | 2011

Whole-exome sequencing identifies somatic mutations of BCOR in acute myeloid leukemia with normal karyotype.

Vera Grossmann; Enrico Tiacci; Antony B. Holmes; Alexander Kohlmann; Maria Paola Martelli; Wolfgang Kern; Ariele Spanhol-Rosseto; Hans-Ulrich Klein; Martin Dugas; Sonja Schindela; Vladimir Trifonov; Susanne Schnittger; Claudia Haferlach; Renato Bassan; Victoria A. Wells; Orietta Spinelli; Joseph Chan; Roberta Rossi; Stefano Baldoni; Luca De Carolis; Katharina Goetze; Hubert Serve; Rudolf Peceny; Karl-Anton Kreuzer; Daniel Oruzio; Giorgina Specchia; Francesco Di Raimondo; Francesco Fabbiano; Marco Sborgia; Arcangelo Liso

Among acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients with a normal karyotype (CN-AML), NPM1 and CEBPA mutations define World Health Organization 2008 provisional entities accounting for approximately 60% of patients, but the remaining 40% are molecularly poorly characterized. Using whole-exome sequencing of one CN-AML patient lacking mutations in NPM1, CEBPA, FLT3-ITD, IDH1, and MLL-PTD, we newly identified a clonal somatic mutation in BCOR (BCL6 corepressor), a gene located on chromosome Xp11.4. Further analyses of 553 AML patients showed that BCOR mutations occurred in 3.8% of unselected CN-AML patients and represented a substantial fraction (17.1%) of CN-AML patients showing the same genotype as the AML index patient subjected to whole-exome sequencing. BCOR somatic mutations were: (1) disruptive events similar to the germline BCOR mutations causing the oculo-facio-cardio-dental genetic syndrome; (2) associated with decreased BCOR mRNA levels, absence of full-length BCOR, and absent or low expression of a truncated BCOR protein; (3) virtually mutually exclusive with NPM1 mutations; and (4) frequently associated with DNMT3A mutations, suggesting cooperativity among these genetic alterations. Finally, BCOR mutations tended to be associated with an inferior outcome in a cohort of 422 CN-AML patients (25.6% vs 56.7% overall survival at 2 years; P = .032). Our results for the first time implicate BCOR in CN-AML pathogenesis.


Leukemia | 2014

SF3B1 mutations correlated to cytogenetics and mutations in NOTCH1, FBXW7, MYD88, XPO1 and TP53 in 1160 untreated CLL patients.

Sabine Jeromin; Sandra Weissmann; Claudia Haferlach; F Dicker; K Bayer; Vera Grossmann; Tamara Alpermann; Andreas Roller; Alexander Kohlmann; T Haferlach; W Kern; S Schnittger

We analyzed a large cohort of 1160 untreated CLL patients for novel genetic markers (SF3B1, NOTCH1, FBXW7, MYD88, XPO1) in the context of molecular, immunophenotypic and cytogenetic data. NOTCH1 mutations (mut) (12.3%), SF3B1mut (9.0%) and TP53mut (7.1%) were more frequent than XPO1mut (3.4%), FBXW7mut (2.5%) and MYD88mut (1.5%). SF3B1mut, NOTCH1mut, TP53mut and XPO1mut were highly correlated to unmutated, whereas MYD88mut were associated with mutated IGHV status. Associations of diverse cytogenetic aberrations and mutations emerged: (1) SF3B1mut with del(11q), (2) NOTCH1mut and FBXW7mut with trisomy 12 and nearly exclusiveness of SF3B1mut, (3) MYD88mut with del(13q) sole and low frequencies of SF3B1mut, NOTCH1mut and FBXW7mut. In patients with normal karyotype only SF3B1mut were frequent, whereas NOTCH1mut rarely occurred. An adverse prognostic impact on time to treatment (TTT) and overall survival (OS) was observed for SF3B1mut, NOTCH1mut and TP53 disruption. In multivariate analyses SF3B1mut, IGHV mutational status and del(11q) were the only independent genetic markers for TTT, whereas for OS SF3B1mut, IGHV mutational status and TP53 disruption presented with significant impact. Finally, our data suggest that analysis of gene mutations refines the risk stratification of cytogenetic prognostic subgroups and confirms data of a recently proposed model integrating molecular and cytogenetic data.


Leukemia | 2012

Landscape of TET2 mutations in acute myeloid leukemia.

Sandra Weissmann; Tamara Alpermann; Vera Grossmann; A Kowarsch; Niroshan Nadarajah; Christiane Eder; F Dicker; Annette Fasan; Claudia Haferlach; T Haferlach; W Kern; S Schnittger; Alexander Kohlmann

We investigated ten–eleven translocation 2 (TET2) mutations in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), their correlation with other gene mutations and prognostic value. By deep-sequencing, 131 somatic TET2 mutations were identified in 87/318 (27.4%) patients. Of 87 mutated cases, 44 (50.6%) carried two mutations. TET2 mutations were concomitantly observed with mutations in NPM1, FLT3-ITD, FLT3-TKD, JAK2, RUNX1, CEBPA, CBL and KRAS. However, TET2 mutations rarely concomitantly occurred with IDH1mut or IDH2mut (2/251 or 0/184; P=0.046 and P=0.003, respectively). TET2 mutations were associated with normal karyotype AML (CN-AML) (62/206 (30.1%) CN-AML vs 20/107 (18.7%) aberrant karyotype; P=0.031), higher white blood cell count (mean 65.3 vs 40.3 × 109/l, P=0.023), lower platelet count (mean 68.6 vs 92.4 × 109/l, P=0.03) and higher age (67.5 vs 65.2 years, P<0.001). Survival analyses were restricted to de novo CN-AML patients (n=165) and showed inferior event-free survival (EFS) of TET2 mutations compared with TET2wt (median: 6.7 vs 18.7 months, P=0.009). This negative effect of TET2 mutation on EFS was particularly observed in patients ⩽65 years (median: 8.9 months vs not reached (n.r.), P=0.027) as well as in patients of the European LeukemiaNet favorable-risk subgroup, that is, patients harboring mutated CEBPA and/or mutated NPM1 without FLT3-ITD (median: 10.3 vs 41.3 months, P=0.048). These data support a role for TET2 as an important prognostic biomarker in AML.


Blood | 2013

EZH2 mutations are frequent and represent an early event in follicular lymphoma

Csaba Bödör; Vera Grossmann; Nikolay Popov; Jessica Okosun; Ciaran O'Riain; King Tan; Jacek Marzec; Shamzah Araf; Jun Wang; Abigail Lee; Andrew Clear; Silvia Montoto; Janet Matthews; Sameena Iqbal; Hajnalka Rajnai; Andreas Rosenwald; German Ott; Elias Campo; Lisa M. Rimsza; Erlend B. Smeland; Wing C. Chan; Rita M. Braziel; Louis M. Staudt; George E. Wright; T. Andrew Lister; Olivier Elemento; Robert Kerrin Hills; John G. Gribben; Claude Chelala; András Matolcsy

Gain of function mutations in the H3K27 methyltransferase EZH2 represent a promising therapeutic target in germinal center lymphomas. In this study, we assessed the frequency and distribution of EZH2 mutations in a large cohort of patients with follicular lymphoma (FL) (n = 366) and performed a longitudinal analysis of mutation during the disease progression from FL to transformed FL (tFL) (n = 33). Mutations were detected at 3 recurrent mutation hot spots (Y646, A682, and A692) in 27% of FL cases with variant allele frequencies (VAF) ranging from 2% to 61%. By comparing VAF of EZH2 with other mutation targets (CREBBP, MLL2, TNFRSF14, and MEF2B), we were able to distinguish patients harboring clonal EZH2 mutation from rarer cases with subclonal mutations. Overall, the high incidence of EZH2 mutations in FL and their stability during disease progression makes FL an appropriate disease to evaluate EZH2 targeted therapy.


Blood | 2013

Comprehensive mutational profiling in advanced systemic mastocytosis

Juliana Schwaab; Susanne Schnittger; Karl Sotlar; Christoph Walz; Alice Fabarius; Markus Pfirrmann; Alexander Kohlmann; Vera Grossmann; Manja Meggendorfer; Hans-Peter Horny; Peter Valent; Mohamad Jawhar; Martina Teichmann; Georgia Metzgeroth; Philipp Erben; Thomas Ernst; Andreas Hochhaus; Torsten Haferlach; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Nicholas C.P. Cross; Andreas Reiter

To explore mechanisms contributing to the clinical heterogeneity of systemic mastocytosis (SM) and to suboptimal responses to diverse therapies, we analyzed 39 KIT D816V mutated patients with indolent SM (n = 10), smoldering SM (n = 2), SM with associated clonal hematologic nonmast cell lineage disorder (SM-AHNMD, n = 5), and aggressive SM (n = 15) or mast cell leukemia (n = 7) with (n = 18) or without (n = 4) AHNMD for additional molecular aberrations. We applied next-generation sequencing to investigate ASXL1, CBL, IDH1/2, JAK2, KRAS, MLL-PTD, NPM1, NRAS, TP53, SRSF2, SF3B1, SETBP1, U2AF1 at mutational hotspot regions, and analyzed complete coding regions of EZH2, ETV6, RUNX1, and TET2. We identified additional molecular aberrations in 24/27 (89%) patients with advanced SM (SM-AHNMD, 5/5; aggressive SM/mast cell leukemia, 19/22) whereas only 3/12 (25%) indolent SM/smoldering SM patients carried one additional mutation each (U2AF1, SETBP1, CBL) (P < .001). Most frequently affected genes were TET2, SRSF2, ASXL1, CBL, and RUNX1. In advanced SM, 21/27 patients (78%) carried ≥3 mutations, and 11/27 patients (41%) exhibited ≥5 mutations. Overall survival was significantly shorter in patients with additional aberrations as compared to those with KIT D816V only (P = .019). We conclude that biology and prognosis in SM are related to the pattern of mutated genes that are acquired during disease evolution.


Leukemia | 2011

Molecular profiling of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia reveals diverse mutations in >80% of patients with TET2 and EZH2 being of high prognostic relevance

Vera Grossmann; Alexander Kohlmann; C Eder; Claudia Haferlach; Wolfgang Kern; Nicholas C.P. Cross; T Haferlach; S Schnittger

Molecular profiling of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia reveals diverse mutations in >80% of patients with TET2 and EZH2 being of high prognostic relevance

Collaboration


Dive into the Vera Grossmann's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ulrike Bacher

University of Göttingen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F Dicker

University of Perugia

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge