Therapeutic implications of intratumor heterogeneity for TP53 mutational status in Burkitt lymphoma

Exp Hematol Oncol. 2015 Aug 27:4:24. doi: 10.1186/s40164-015-0019-9. eCollection 2015.

Abstract

Therapeutic implications of intra-tumor heterogeneity are still undefined. In this study we report a genetic and functional analysis aimed at defining the mechanisms of chemoresistance in a 43-year old woman affected by stage IVB Burkitt lymphoma with bulky abdominal masses and peritoneal effusion. The patient, despite a transient initial response to chemotherapy with reduction of the bulky masses, rapidly progressed and died of her disease. Targeted TP53 sequencing found that the bulky mass was wild-type whereas peritoneal fluid cells harbored a R282W mutation. Functional studies on TP53 mutant cells demonstrated an impaired p53-mediated response, resistance to ex vivo doxorubicin administration, overexpression of DNA damage response (DDR) activation markers and high sensitivity to pharmacologic DDR inhibition. These findings suggest that intra-tumor heterogeneity for TP53 mutational status may occur in MYC-driven cancers, and that DDR inhibitors could be effective in targeting hidden TP53 mutant clones in tumors characterized by genomic instability and prone to intra-tumor heterogeneity.

Keywords: Burkitt lymphoma; CHK1; Genomic instability; Intra-tumor heterogeneity; MYC; γ-H2AX.

Publication types

  • Case Reports