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del(17p) without TP53 mutation confers a poor prognosis in intensively treated newly diagnosed patients with multiple myeloma
Author(s) -
Jill Corre,
Aurore Perrot,
Denis Caillot,
Karim Belhadj,
Cyrille Hulin,
Xavier Leleu,
Mohamad Mohty,
Thierry Façon,
Laure Buisson,
Laura Do Souto,
Romain Lannes,
Stéphanie Dufrechou,
Naïs Prade,
Frédérique OrsiniPiocelle,
Laurent Voillat,
Arnaud Jaccard,
Lionel Karlin,
Margaret Macro,
Sabine Bréchignac,
Mamoun Dib,
Laurence Sanhès,
Jean Fontan,
Lauriane Clément-Filliatre,
JeanPierre Marolleau,
Stéphane Minvielle,
Philippe Moreau,
Hervé AvetLoiseau
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
blood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.515
H-Index - 465
eISSN - 1528-0020
pISSN - 0006-4971
DOI - 10.1182/blood.2020008346
Subject(s) - medicine , multiple myeloma , population , oncology , environmental health
Despite tremendous improvements in the outcome of patients with multiple myeloma in the past decade, high-risk patients have not benefited from the approval of novel drugs. The most important prognostic factor is the loss of parts of the short arm of chromosome 17, known as deletion 17p (del(17p)). A recent publication (on a small number of patients) suggested that these patients are at very high-risk only if del(17p) is associated with TP53 mutations, the so-called “double-hit” population. To validate this finding, we designed a much larger study on 121 patients presenting del(17p) in > 55% of their plasma cells, and homogeneously treated by an intensive approach. For these 121 patients, we performed deep next generation sequencing targeted on TP53. The outcome was then compared with a large control population (2505 patients lacking del(17p)). Our results confirmed that the “double hit” situation is the worst (median survival = 36 months), but that del(17p) alone also confers a poor outcome compared with the control cohort (median survival = 52.8 months vs 152.2 months, respectively). In conclusion, our study clearly confirms the extremely poor outcome of patients displaying “double hit," but also that del(17p) alone is still a very high-risk feature, confirming its value as a prognostic indicator for poor outcome.

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