| Literature DB >> 28980058 |
Kazuki Terada1, Hiroki Yamaguchi2, Toshimitsu Ueki3, Kensuke Usuki4, Yutaka Kobayashi5, Kenji Tajika6, Seiji Gomi6, Saiko Kurosawa7, Keiki Miyadera1, Taichiro Tokura1, Ikuko Omori1, Atushi Marumo1, Yusuke Fujiwara1, Shunsuke Yui1, Takeshi Ryotokuji1, Yoshiki Osaki1, Kunihito Arai1, Tomoaki Kitano1, Fumiko Kosaka1, Satoshi Wakita1, Hayato Tamai1, Takahiro Fukuda7, Koiti Inokuchi1.
Abstract
TP53 gene abnormality has been reported to be an unfavorable prognostic factor in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). However, almost all studies of TP53 gene abnormality so far have been limited to mutation searches in the DNA binding domain. As there have been few reports examining both mutation and deletion over the full-length of the TP53 gene, the clinical characteristics of TP53 gene abnormality have not yet been clearly established. In this study, TP53 gene mutation was observed in 7.3% of the total 412 de novo AML cases (33 mutations in 30 cases), with mutation outside the DNA binding domain in eight cases (27%). TP53 gene deletion was observed in 3.1% of 358 cases. All cases had monoallelic deletion with TP53 gene mutation on the opposite allele. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that TP53 gene mutation in the DNA binding domain and outside the DNA binding domain was an independent poor prognostic factor for overall survival and relapse-free survival among the total cohort and it is also an unfavorable prognostic factor in FLT3-ITD-negative AML cases aged 70 years or below with intermediate cytogenetic prognosis. In stratified treatment, full-length search for TP53 gene mutation is therefore very important.Entities:
Keywords: Acute myeloid leukemia; Mutation; Prognostic factor; TP53; Whole-exome gene analysis
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28980058 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-017-3143-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673