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p53 is associated with high-risk and pinpoints TP53 missense mutations in mantle cell lymphoma.

Joana Matos RodriguesMay HassanCatja FreiburghausChristian W EskelundChristian GeislerRiikka RätyArne KolstadChrister SundströmIngrid GlimeliusKirsten GrønbaekAnna KwiecinskaAnna PorwitMats JerkemanSara Ek
Published in: British journal of haematology (2020)
Survival for patients diagnosed with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) has improved drastically in recent years. However, patients carrying mutations in tumour protein p53 (TP53) do not benefit from modern chemotherapy-based treatments and have poor prognosis. Thus, there is a clinical need to identify missense mutations through routine analysis to enable patient stratification. Sequencing is not widely implemented in clinical practice for MCL, and immunohistochemistry (IHC) is a feasible alternative to identify high-risk patients. The aim of the present study was to investigate the accuracy of p53 as a tool to identify patients with TP53 missense mutations and the prognostic impact of overexpression and mutations in a Swedish population-based cohort. In total, 317 cases were investigated using IHC and 255 cases were sequenced, enabling analysis of p53 and TP53 status among 137 cases divided over the two-cohort investigated. The accuracy of predicting missense mutations from protein expression was 82%, with sensitivity at 82% and specificity at 100% in paired samples. We further show the impact of p53 expression and TP53 mutations on survival (hazard ratio of 3·1 in univariate analysis for both), and the association to risk factors, such as high MCL International Prognostic Index, blastoid morphology and proliferation, in a population-based setting.
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