The calculated SIRs showed a >100-fold higher risk of sarcoma, female breast cancer, and hematologic malignancies for the p53 mutation carriers and agreed with the findings of an earlier segregation analysis based on the same cohort.
Alterations of the N-ras oncogene and p53 tumor suppressor gene have been demonstrated to play an important role in pathogenesis of hematological malignancies.
Hodgkin's disease (HD) is the most common haematological malignancy after chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, but very little is known about its pathogenesis or the genetic events that contribute to the malignant phenotype of the tumour cells. p53 is assumed to play an important role in the pathogenesis of HD, based on the observation that p53 protein is frequently accumulated in Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg (H & RS) cells.
Mutation of the TP53 gene is one of the most common molecular alterations in a variety of tumors, but it occurs infrequently in childhood and adult hematological malignancies.
Isochromosome 17q in blast crisis of chronic myeloid leukemia and in other hematologic malignancies is the result of clustered breakpoints in 17p11 and is not associated with coding TP53 mutations.
Abnormalities of the p53 gene are the most common molecular lesions in human cancer, and may be of prognostic significance in hematologic malignancies.
The G:C --> A:T transition at cathepsin G dinucleotides commonly reported in p53 mutations in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and other hematologic malignancies was observed in only 1 case of B-PLL.
Constitutive p21WAF1/CIP1/SDI1 mRNA expression was detected in neoplastic cells from patients with various hematological malignancies as well as in normal bone marrow mononuclear cells and in myeloid and lymphoid cell lines independent of their p53 status.
We assessed the value of immunocytochemical analysis of p53 protein on blood or bone marrow slides in the detection of p53 mutation in hematological malignancies, by comparison with single-stranded conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis of exons 4 to 10 of the P53 gene.