| Literature DB >> 34951009 |
Annalisa Chiappella1, Fary Diop2, Claudio Agostinelli3, Mattia Novo4, Luca Nassi2, Andrea Evangelista5, Giovannino Ciccone5, Alice Di Rocco6, Maurizio Martelli6, Federica Melle7, Riccardo Moia2, Giovanna Motta7, Simona Righi3, Elisa Santambrogio8, Alessandra Tucci9, Monica Balzarotti10, Marco Ladetto11, Stefano A Pileri7, Gianluca Gaidano2, Umberto Vitolo4.
Abstract
The prognostic role of TP53 disruption has been established in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Aim of this analysis was to correlate TP53 mutations by Sanger sequencing, cell of origin (COO) profile by Lymph2Cx panel on the NanoString platform and MYC, BCL2 and BCL6 overexpression or re-arrangements by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and fluorescent in-situ hybridization (FISH), with outcome in DLBCL patients enrolled into the FIL-DLCL04 trial (NCT00499018). One hundred and twenty-five DLBCL patients with tumour block available were analyzed. TP53 was mutated in 11/125 (9%) cases; 60/125 patients received high-dose chemoimmunotherapy up-front, as for the randomization arm; COO was reported in 88 patients: 48 germinal centre B-cell like, 25 activated B-cell like and 17 unclassified; 26 patients were double expressors in IHC and 11 double hit in FISH. After a median follow-up of 72 months, five-year failure-free survival (FFS) for TP53 mutated versus wild-type was 24% and 72%, and five-year overall survival (OS) was 34% and 83%, respectively. Adjusted hazard ratio (HR) was 2·28 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0·89-5·86, p = 0·086] and 4·05 (95% CI 1·37-11·97, p = 0·011) for FFS and OS, respectively. In this series of young DLBCL patients, TP53 gene mutation identified a poor prognosis subgroup, regardless of treatment and other biological markers.Entities:
Keywords: BCL-2; TP53; haematological malignancy; non-Hodgkin lymphoma; prognostic factors; transplantation
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34951009 DOI: 10.1111/bjh.17971
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Haematol ISSN: 0007-1048 Impact factor: 6.998