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TERT promoter mutation is an objective clinical marker for disease progression in chondrosarcoma.

Yifan ZhangYi ChenChen YangNelly SegerAsle Charles HeslaPanagiotis TsagkozisOlle LarssonYingbo LinFelix Haglund de Flon
Published in: Modern pathology : an official journal of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, Inc (2021)
Chondrosarcomas are the second most common malignant bone tumor. Activating promoter mutations in telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) was recently described by us and others as a frequent mutation in high-grade chondrosarcoma. In this study, we investigate the prognostic significance of TERT promoter mutations in 241 chondrosarcomas from 190 patients collected over 24 years (1994-2017). The TERT promoter was sequenced after microdissection of 135 chondrosarcomas from 106 patients in addition to data from our previous cohort. The TERT promoter mutation at -124 C > T was found in 45% of all patients and was significantly associated (p > 0,001) with higher tumor grade, shorter metastasis-free survival, and disease-specific survival. Additionally, TERT promoter-mutated tumors were associated with a more aggressive metastatic pattern. Shorter survival was observed in patients with wild-type primary tumors who developed a mutated metastasis indicative of tumor progression. Primary tumor genetic heterogeneity and altering mutational status between nonsynchronous metastatic lesions suggests that chondrosarcoma is a multiclonal disease progressing through a branching evolution. Conclusion: TERT promoter mutation seems to be a central event in chondrosarcoma progression with association to metastatic disease and disease-related mortality. As an easily analyzed marker, there is future potential to utilize TERT promoter mutation status as a prognostic marker and investigate telomerase-targeted therapy in chondrosarcomas.
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