Abstract

Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) is characterised by a heterogeneous clinical course. Such heterogeneity is associated with a number of markers, including TP53 gene inactivation. While TP53 gene alterations determine resistance to chemotherapy, it is not clear whether they can influence early disease progression. To clarify this issue, TP53 mutations and deletions of the corresponding locus [del(17p)] were evaluated in 469 cases from the O-CLL1 observational study that recruited a cohort of clinically and molecularly characterised Binet stage A patients. Twenty-four cases harboured somatic TP53 mutations [accompanied by del(17p) in 9 cases], 2 patients had del(17p) only, and 5 patients had TP53 germ-line variants. While del(17p) with or without TP53 mutations was capable of significantly predicting the time to first treatment, a reliable measure of disease progression, TP53 mutations were not. This was true for cases with high or low variant allele frequency. The lack of predictive ability was independent of the functional features of the mutant P53 protein in terms of transactivation and dominant negative potential. TP53 mutations alone were more frequent in patients with mutated IGHV genes, whereas del(17p) was associated with the presence of adverse prognostic factors, including CD38 positivity, unmutated-IGHV gene status, and NOTCH1 mutations.

Highlights

  • Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) is characterised by a heterogeneous clinical course

  • TP53 mutational status was determined by next generation sequencing (NGS) on highly purified (> 95%) CLL B-cells from 475 patients

  • The present study investigated the influence on disease progression of TP53 alterations in Binet A CLL patients, enrolled in the multicentre prospective observational O-CLL1 trial with a long follow-up

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) is characterised by a heterogeneous clinical course. While TP53 gene alterations determine resistance to chemotherapy, it is not clear whether they can influence early disease progression To clarify this issue, TP53 mutations and deletions of the corresponding locus [del(17p)] were evaluated in 469 cases from the O-CLL1 observational study that recruited a cohort of clinically and molecularly characterised Binet stage A patients. While del(17p) with or without TP53 mutations was capable of significantly predicting the time to first treatment, a reliable measure of disease progression, TP53 mutations were not This was true for cases with high or low variant allele frequency. Despite the morphological and phenotypic homogeneity of CLL cells, the clinical course of the disease is highly heterogeneous ranging from rapid disease progression, requiring early treatment, to decades of survival with no treatment ­need[2]. The possible influence of the TP53 alterations on the time to first treatment (TTFT) and on the expansion of individual clones or sub-clones was investigated

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