Peripheral T-cell lymphoma: molecular profiling recognizes subclasses and identifies prognostic markers

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2021-12-20

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Rodriguez, Marta
Alonso-Alonso, Ruth
Tomas-Roca, Laura
Rodriguez-Pinilla, Socorro M.
Manso-Alonso, Rebeca
Cereceda, Laura
Borregon, Jennifer
Villaescusa, Teresa
Cordoba, Raul
Sanchez-Beato, Margarita

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Elsevier
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Peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) is a clinically aggressive disease, with a poor response to therapy and a low overall survival rate of approximately 30% after 5 years. We have analyzed a series of 105 cases with a diagnosis of PTCL using a customized NanoString platform (NanoString Technologies, Seattle, WA) that includes 208 genes associated with T-cell differentiation, oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes, deregulated pathways, and stromal cell subpopulations. A comparative analysis of the various histological types of PTCL (angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma [AITL]; PTCL with T follicular helper [TFH] phenotype; PTCL not otherwise specified [NOS]) showed that specific sets of genes were associated with each of the diagnoses. These included TFH markers, cytotoxic markers, and genes whose expression was a surrogate for specific cellular subpopulations, including follicular dendritic cells, mast cells, and genes belonging to precise survival (NF-kappa B) and other pathways. Furthermore, the mutational profile was analyzed using a custom panel that targeted 62 genes in 76 cases distributed in AITL, PTCL-TFH, and PTCL-NOS. The main differences among the 3 nodal PTCL classes involved the RHOA(G)(17V) mutations (P

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Expression, Survival, Mutation

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