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. 2020 Apr;22(4):571-578.
doi: 10.1016/j.jmoldx.2020.01.008. Epub 2020 Feb 6.

Ultrasensitive Detection of NOTCH1 c.7544_7545delCT Mutations in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia by Droplet Digital PCR Reveals High Frequency of Subclonal Mutations and Predicts Clinical Outcome in Cases with Trisomy 12

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Ultrasensitive Detection of NOTCH1 c.7544_7545delCT Mutations in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia by Droplet Digital PCR Reveals High Frequency of Subclonal Mutations and Predicts Clinical Outcome in Cases with Trisomy 12

Catherine Hoofd et al. J Mol Diagn. 2020 Apr.
Free article

Abstract

NOTCH1 is recurrently mutated in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), most commonly as a 2-bp frameshift deletion (c.7541_7542delCT). This mutated allele encodes a truncated form of the receptor (p.P2514Rfs∗4) lacking the C-terminal proline, glutamic acid, serine, and threonine (PEST) degradation domain that increases NOTCH1 signaling duration. NOTCH1 mutation has been associated with poor clinical outcomes in CLL. We validated a highly sensitive and quantitative droplet digital PCR assay for the NOTCH1 delCT mutation, which was anticipated to perform well compared with Sanger sequencing and allele-specific PCR. Performance characteristics of this assay were tested on 126 samples from an unselected CLL cohort and a separate cohort of 85 samples from patients with trisomy 12 CLL. The delCT mutation was detected at allele frequencies as low as 0.024%; 25% of unselected cases and 55% of trisomy 12 cases were positive at the 0.024% detection threshold. Mutational burdens ≥1% were significantly associated with shorter overall survival (OS) in patients with trisomy 12+ disease in multivariate analysis (median OS, 9.1 versus 13 years, with hazard ratio of 2.34; P = 0.031). Mutational burdens <1% correlated with shorter OS in univariate, but not multivariate, analyses. These results suggest that droplet digital PCR testing for NOTCH1 delCT mutation may aid in risk stratification and/or disease monitoring in certain subsets of patients with CLL.

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