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e-Article

Implications of TP53 allelic state for genome stability, clinical presentation and outcomes in myelodysplastic syndromes
Document Type
article
Author
Bernard, ElsaNannya, YasuhitoHasserjian, Robert PDevlin, Sean MTuechler, HeinzMedina-Martinez, Juan SYoshizato, TetsuichiShiozawa, YusukeSaiki, RyunosukeMalcovati, LucaLevine, Max FArango, Juan EZhou, YangyuSolé, FrancescCargo, Catherine AHaase, DetlefCreignou, MariaGerming, UlrichZhang, YanmingGundem, GunesSarian, Araxevan de Loosdrecht, Arjan AJädersten, MartinTobiasson, MagnusKosmider, OlivierFollo, Matilde YThol, FelicitasPinheiro, Ronald FSantini, ValeriaKotsianidis, IoannisBoultwood, JacquelineSantos, Fabio PSSchanz, JulieKasahara, SenjiIshikawa, TakayukiTsurumi, HisashiTakaori-Kondo, AkifumiKiguchi, ToruPolprasert, ChantanaBennett, John MKlimek, Virginia MSavona, Michael RBelickova, MonikaGanster, ChristinaPalomo, LauraSanz, GuillermoAdes, LionelDella Porta, Matteo GiovanniElias, Harold KSmith, Alexandra GWerner, YeseniaPatel, MinalViale, AgnèsVanness, KatelyndNeuberg, Donna SStevenson, Kristen EMenghrajani, KamalBolton, Kelly LFenaux, PierrePellagatti, AndreaPlatzbecker, UweHeuser, MichaelValent, PeterChiba, ShigeruMiyazaki, YasushiFinelli, CarloVoso, Maria TeresaShih, Lee-YungFontenay, MichaelaJansen, Joop HCervera, JoséAtsuta, YoshikoGattermann, NorbertEbert, Benjamin LBejar, RafaelGreenberg, Peter LCazzola, MarioHellström-Lindberg, EvaOgawa, SeishiPapaemmanuil, Elli
Source
Nature Medicine. 26(10)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Hematology
Stem Cell Research
Cancer
Clinical Research
Rare Diseases
Genetics
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Alleles
Cohort Studies
DNA Copy Number Variations
DNA Mutational Analysis
Female
Gene Frequency
Genomic Instability
Humans
Loss of Heterozygosity
Male
Mutation
Myelodysplastic Syndromes
Phenotype
Prognosis
Survival Analysis
Treatment Outcome
Tumor Suppressor Protein p53
Medical and Health Sciences
Immunology
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Tumor protein p53 (TP53) is the most frequently mutated gene in cancer1,2. In patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), TP53 mutations are associated with high-risk disease3,4, rapid transformation to acute myeloid leukemia (AML)5, resistance to conventional therapies6-8 and dismal outcomes9. Consistent with the tumor-suppressive role of TP53, patients harbor both mono- and biallelic mutations10. However, the biological and clinical implications of TP53 allelic state have not been fully investigated in MDS or any other cancer type. We analyzed 3,324 patients with MDS for TP53 mutations and allelic imbalances and delineated two subsets of patients with distinct phenotypes and outcomes. One-third of TP53-mutated patients had monoallelic mutations whereas two-thirds had multiple hits (multi-hit) consistent with biallelic targeting. Established associations with complex karyotype, few co-occurring mutations, high-risk presentation and poor outcomes were specific to multi-hit patients only. TP53 multi-hit state predicted risk of death and leukemic transformation independently of the Revised International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS-R)11. Surprisingly, monoallelic patients did not differ from TP53 wild-type patients in outcomes and response to therapy. This study shows that consideration of TP53 allelic state is critical for diagnostic and prognostic precision in MDS as well as in future correlative studies of treatment response.