Affiliation:
1. Cleveland Clinic
2. University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
3. Wayne State University
4. MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory
Abstract
Abstract
Background: TP53 mutations (TP53MT) occur in diverse genomic configurations. Particularly, biallelic inactivation is associated with poor overall survival in cancer. Lesions affecting only one allele might not be directly leukemogenic, questioning the presence of cryptic biallelic subclones in cases with dismal prognosis.
Methods: We have collected clinical and molecular data of 7400 patients with myeloid neoplasms and applied a novel model to properly resolve the allelic configuration of TP53MT and assess prognosis more precisely.
Results: Overall, TP53MT were found in 1010 patients. Following the traditional criteria, 36% of cases were classified as single hits while 64% exhibited double hits genomic configuration. Using a newly developed molecular algorithm, we found that 579 (57%) patients had unequivocally biallelic, 239 (24%) likely contained biallelic, and 192 (19%) had most likely monoallelic TP53MT. Such classification was further substantiated by a survival-based model built after re-categorization. Among cases traditionally considered monoallelic, the overall survival of those with probable monoallelic mutations was similar to the one of wild-type patients and was better than that of patients with a biallelic configuration. As a result, patients with certain biallelic hits, regardless of the disease subtype (AML or MDS), had a similar prognosis. Similar results were observed when the model was applied to an external cohort. These results were recapitulated by single-cell DNA studies, which unveiled the biallelic nature of previously considered monoallelic cases.
Conclusion: Our novel approach more accurately resolves TP53 genomic configuration and uncovers genetic mosaicism for the use in the clinical setting to improve prognostic evaluation.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
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