Stephanie A Hart, Laura A Lee, Adam C Seegmiller, Emily F Mason
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract: The International Consensus (ICC) and World Health Organization fifth edition (WHO5) classifications introduced new, but differing, categories of myeloid disease defined by TP53 mutations. We reviewed a cohort of 188 cases of TP53-mutated myeloid disease to determine how diagnoses and outcomes differ between the 2 classifications. Overall, 120 (64%) cases were classified differently by the ICC and WHO5, including 24 of 80 (30%) cases with <20% blasts. These cases were discrepantly categorized primarily because of inclusion of complex karyotype (CK) as a surrogate for biallelic TP53 inactivation only in the ICC. However, there were no significant differences in clinicopathologic characteristics or overall survival between cases categorized as TP53-mutated disease by both classifications and those with a single TP53 mutation and CK, suggesting that CK reliably identifies TP53-mutated cases with biallelic TP53 inactivation. Most cases of acute myeloid leukemia (AML; 96/102 [94%]) were discrepantly diagnosed between the ICC and WHO5 because of the introduction of AML with mutated TP53 as a distinct category only in the ICC. Nearly all of these were instead diagnosed as AML, myelodysplasia related (AML-MR) by WHO5. However, when compared with a separate cohort of patients with AML-MR without TP53 mutations, patients with TP53-mutated AML showed a distinct genetic profile and significantly worse overall survival, supporting the inclusion of AML with mutated TP53 as a distinct disease category. Overall, our results show that a significant percentage of TP53-mutated myeloid disease is classified differently by the ICC and WHO5 and highlight areas to address in future classification systems.
期刊介绍:
Blood Advances, a semimonthly medical journal published by the American Society of Hematology, marks the first addition to the Blood family in 70 years. This peer-reviewed, online-only, open-access journal was launched under the leadership of founding editor-in-chief Robert Negrin, MD, from Stanford University Medical Center in Stanford, CA, with its inaugural issue released on November 29, 2016.
Blood Advances serves as an international platform for original articles detailing basic laboratory, translational, and clinical investigations in hematology. The journal comprehensively covers all aspects of hematology, including disorders of leukocytes (both benign and malignant), erythrocytes, platelets, hemostatic mechanisms, vascular biology, immunology, and hematologic oncology. Each article undergoes a rigorous peer-review process, with selection based on the originality of the findings, the high quality of the work presented, and the clarity of the presentation.