Single-cell analysis is of significant importance in delineating the exact phylogeny of the subclonal population and in discovering subtle diversification. So far, studies of intratumor heterogeneity and clonal evolution in multiple myeloma (MM) were largely focused on the bulk tumor population level. We performed quantitative multigene fluorescence in situ hybridization (QM-FISH) in 129 longitudinal samples of 57 MM patients. All the patients had newly diagnosed and relapsed paired samples. An expanded cohort of 188 MM patients underwent conventional FISH (cFISH) to validate the cytogenetic evolution in bulk tumor level. Forty-three of 57 patients (75.4%) harbored 3 or 4 cytogenetic clones at diagnosis. We delineated the phylogeny of the subclonal tumor population and derived the evolutionary architecture in each patient. Patients with clonal stabilization had a significantly improved overall survival (OS) than those with other evolutionary patterns (median OS, 71.2 months vs 39.7 months vs 35.2 months vs 25.5 months, for stable, differential, branching, and linear patterns, respectively; P = .001). A high degree of consistency and complementarity across QM-FISH and cFISH was observed in the evaluation of cytogenetic evolution patterns in MM. Survival after relapse was greater influenced by the presence of high-risk aberrations at relapse (hazard ratio = 2.07) rather than present at diagnosis (hazard ratio = 1.55). This study shows that QM-FISH is a valuable tool to elucidate the clonal architecture at the single-cell level. Clonal evolution pattern is of prognostic significance, highlighting the need for repeated cytogenetic evaluation in relapsed MM.
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