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The TP53 gene is a tumor suppressor that maps on chromosome 17 (17p13). In multiple myeloma (MM), 17p deletion (del17p) associates with poor prognosis of disease progression. TP53 deletions are rare at MM diagnosis, but they increase as disease advances and are associated with poor outcomes.
To understand the prognostic value of TP53 subclonal deletions, Vallari Shah from Martin Kaiser’s group at the Institute of Cancer Research, London, UK, and collaborators, studied the association between these deletions and the clinical outcomes of newly diagnosed (ND) MM patients. They used a technique known as MLPA (multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification), to define a cut-off value of subclonal TP53 deletions that is clinically significant. MLPA can be easily set up in a diagnostic laboratory and, in contrast to iFISH (interphase fluorescent in situ hybridization), it easily allows detection of TP53 deletions in subclones of myeloma cells. The results of the study were published in Blood in October 2018.
Subclonal TP53 deletions can be useful prognostic markers in MM and can be detected in a prognostic laboratory with the use of the MLPA assay.
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