Department of Cellular Pathology, Northern Institute for Cancer Research, Royal Victoria Infirmary, Institute of Human Genetics, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom.
Clin Cancer Res. 2010 Feb 15;16(4):1108-18. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-09-1865. Epub 2010 Feb 9.
Most neuroblastomas initially respond to therapy but many relapse with chemoresistant disease. p53 mutations are rare in diagnostic neuroblastomas, but we have previously reported inactivation of the p53/MDM2/p14(ARF) pathway in 9 of 17 (53%) neuroblastoma cell lines established at relapse.
Inactivation of the p53/MDM2/p14(ARF) pathway develops during treatment and contributes to neuroblastoma relapse.
Eighty-four neuroblastomas were studied from 41 patients with relapsed neuroblastoma including 38 paired neuroblastomas at different stages of therapy. p53 mutations were detected by automated sequencing, p14(ARF) methylation and deletion by methylation-specific PCR and duplex PCR, respectively, and MDM2 amplification by fluorescent in situ hybridization.
Abnormalities in the p53 pathway were identified in 20 of 41 (49%) cases. Downstream defects due to inactivating missense p53 mutations were identified in 6 of 41 (15%) cases, 5 following chemotherapy and/or at relapse and 1 at diagnosis, postchemotherapy, and relapse. The presence of a p53 mutation was independently prognostic for overall survival (hazard ratio, 3.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-9.9; P = 0.02). Upstream defects were present in 35% of cases: MDM2 amplification in 3 cases, all at diagnosis and relapse and p14(ARF) inactivation in 12 of 41 (29%) cases: 3 had p14(ARF) methylation, 2 after chemotherapy, and 9 had homozygous deletions, 8 at diagnosis and relapse.
These results show that a high proportion of neuroblastomas which relapse have an abnormality in the p53 pathway. The majority have upstream defects suggesting that agents which reactivate wild-type p53 would be beneficial, in contrast to those with downstream defects in which p53-independent therapies are indicated.
大多数神经母细胞瘤最初对治疗有反应,但许多在化疗耐药性疾病中复发。p53 突变在诊断性神经母细胞瘤中很少见,但我们之前报道过,在 17 例(53%)复发的神经母细胞瘤细胞系中,有 9 例存在 p53/MDM2/p14(ARF)通路失活。
p53/MDM2/p14(ARF)通路的失活发生在治疗过程中,并导致神经母细胞瘤复发。
对 41 例神经母细胞瘤复发患者的 84 例神经母细胞瘤进行了研究,其中包括 38 对处于不同治疗阶段的神经母细胞瘤。通过自动测序检测 p53 突变,通过甲基化特异性 PCR 和双 PCR 分别检测 p14(ARF)甲基化和缺失,通过荧光原位杂交检测 MDM2 扩增。
在 41 例(49%)病例中发现了 p53 通路异常。在 41 例(15%)病例中发现了因失活错义 p53 突变导致的下游缺陷,其中 5 例在化疗后和/或复发时,1 例在诊断、化疗后和复发时。p53 突变的存在与总生存率独立相关(危险比,3.4;95%置信区间,1.2-9.9;P = 0.02)。上游缺陷存在于 35%的病例中:3 例存在 MDM2 扩增,均在诊断和复发时,12 例存在 p14(ARF)失活:3 例存在 p14(ARF)甲基化,2 例在化疗后,9 例存在纯合缺失,8 例在诊断和复发时。
这些结果表明,复发的神经母细胞瘤中有相当比例存在 p53 通路异常。大多数存在上游缺陷,这表明激活野生型 p53 的药物可能会有益,而不是那些存在下游缺陷的药物,这些药物需要使用非依赖 p53 的治疗方法。