Genetic and Epigenetic Alterations of TERT Are Associated with Inferior Outcome in Adolescent and Young Adult Patients with Melanoma
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2017 papers
Abstract
Progression of melanoma to distant sites in adolescents and young adults (AYAs) is not reliably predicted by clinicopathologic criteria. TERT promoter mutations when combined with BRAF/NRAS mutations correlate with adverse outcome in adult melanoma. To determine the prognostic value of TERT alterations in AYA melanoma, we investigated the association of TERT promoter mutations, as well as promoter methylation, an epigenetic alteration also linked to TERT upregulation, with TERT mRNA expression and outcome using a well-characterized cohort of 27 patients with melanoma (ages 8-25, mean 20). TERT mRNA expression levels were significantly higher in tumors harboring TERT promoter mutation and/or hypermethylation than those without either aberration (P = 0.046). TERT promoter mutations alone did not predict adverse outcomes (P = 0.50), but the presence of TERT promoter methylation, alone or concurrent with promoter mutations, correlated with reduced recurrence-free survival (P = 0.001). These data suggest that genetic and epigenetic alterations of TERT are associated with TERT upregulation and may predict clinical outcomes in AYA melanoma. A more exhaustive understanding of the different molecular mechanisms leading to increased TERT expression may guide development of prognostic assays to stratify AYA melanoma patients according to clinical risk.
Related Papers
- → Mouse Models of Epigenetic Inheritance(2010)35 cited
- → Epigenetic regulation in diabetic vascular complications(2019)42 cited
- → Epigenetic Modifiers as Game Changers for Healthy Aging(2023)8 cited
- → Relationship of cell-mediated cytotoxicity against melanoma cells to prognosis in melanoma patients(1978)41 cited
- Evaluation of Follow-up Impact of the Honoured Outcome under the Quasi-Purchase System of Research Outcome(2008)