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TP53 mutation and EZH2 expression negatively affect outcomes in mantle cell lymphoma, with a synergistic negative effect.
The presence of a TP53 mutation negatively affects outcomes in patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), as does EZH2 expression, and taken together the negative effect is synergistic, according to findings from a study published in Human Pathology.
Findings from an 11-gene next-generation sequencing panel showed that EZH2 overexpression was present in 42% of the 81 patients with MCL in the study, and was correlated with an aggressive histology (P = .005), a high Ki-67 proliferation rate (P < .001), and p53 mutant pattern (P = .001). The panel also identified a total of 149 mutations present in 68 patients in the study (84%) and the median number of mutations present was 2 (range, 0-5) per patient. The most common mutations were ATM (48.1%), TP53 (28.4%), CCND1 (19.8%), KMT2D (14.8%,) and UBR5 (12.3%), which investigators noted had median variant allelic frequencies (VAFs) of 40.5%, 35.6%, 40.4%, 36.3%, and 38%, respectively, indicating that they were major clones.
When examining the total cohort of patients, the presence of a TP53 mutation was associated with aggressive histology (65.2% vs. 25.9%, P = .002) vs wild-type TP53. Additionally, a high Ki-67 proliferation rate (65.2% vs. 33.9%, P = .014) and p53 mutant pattern by immunohistochemical stain (78.6% vs. 6.8%, P < .001) were also seen, respectively.
“[Prescence of a] TP53 mutation and EZH2 expression demonstrated overlapping features including aggressive histology, high Ki-67 proliferation rate, and p53 mutant pattern by immunohistochemistry,” study authors wrote. “EZH2-[positive] MCL commonly harbors [a] TP53 mutation [and] EZH2 expression correlates with [a] high Ki-67 proliferation rate irrespective of TP53 mutation in MCL. Aggressive histology is associated with EZH2 expression or [a] TP53 mutation, possibly via independent mechanisms. [The] p53 mutant pattern by immunohistochemistry, commonly seen in EZH2-[positive] MCL, is due to [the] TP53 mutation.”
Additionally, when examining TP53 mutations, investigators found that patients with EZH2-positive disease were more likely to have the mutation than those with EZH2-negative disease at rates of 41.2% vs 19.1%, respectively (P = .045).
“There were no significant differences in terms of mutation frequency in other genes between the 2 groups. TP53 mutations were present throughout the gene and no recurrent mutation[s] were present in both groups. The median VAFs of the TP53 mutation were similar (32.1% vs 38%, respectively; P = .593),” study authors noted. “Correlation between EZH2 expression and high Ki-67 proliferation rate was observed irrespective of TP53 mutation status,” they added.
Data from the study was compiled from a prior cohort of patients (n = 150) whose EZH2 expression status was collected at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and patients who were available for formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) blocks were included. All patients had MCL per the WHO Classification System and treatment-naive, de novo disease. Those with leukemic, non-nodal MCL cases were not included in the study.
Patients underwent genetic testing with the customized 11-gene panel (n = 81) which included ATM, BIRC3, CCND1, KMT2C, KMT2D, NOTCH1, NOTCH2, RB1, TP53, TRAF2,and UBR5 mutations. The median age of patients at diagnosis was 61 years (range, 39-88). Most patients were male (81.0%) and had advanced disease (92.2%), classic histology (63.0%), EZH2-negative (58.0%) disease, Ki-67 low disease (57.0%), and a non-mutant p53 pattern of expression (76.0%). Additionally, patients had a MIPI-b score of low (18%), intermediate (38%), or high (43%) and had received treatment with HyperCVAD with or without rituximab (Rituxan; 77%); rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone (16%); observation (2%); or data was unavailable (5%).
Moreover, EZH2-positive MCL and the presence of a TP53 mutation did not correlate with aggressive histology (P = .495) or high Ki-67 proliferation rate (P = .198) but did correlate with p53 mutant pattern (P < .001). However, EZH2-negative MCL and the presence of a TP53 mutation correlated with aggressive histology (P = .003) and p53 mutant pattern (P = .029).
Investigators found that EZH2 overexpression was associated with an inferior overall survival in MCL. Additionally, “in patients with [a] TP53 mutation, EZH2 overexpression did not show [a] significant difference in overall survival [P = .241]. In patients with wild-type TP53, however, EZH2-[positive] MCL demonstrated significantly worse outcomes [P = .005].”
Kim DH, Siddiqui S, Jain P, et al. TP53 mutation is frequent in mantle cell lymphoma with EZH2 expression and have dismal outcome when both are present. Hum Pathol. 2024;146:1-7. doi:10.1016/j.humpath.2024.03.002
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