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Title: Longitudinal study of TP53 mutations in eight patients with potentially malignant oral mucosal disorders. Author: Ogmundsdóttir HM, Hilmarsdóttir H, Björnsson J, Holbrook WP. Journal: J Oral Pathol Med; 2009 Oct; 38(9):716-21. PubMed ID: 19473449. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: In a previous cross-sectional study, the authors found a higher rate of TP53 mutation in oral lichen planus (OLP) than in hyperkeratosis. By analysing for TP53 mutations in serial samples from patients on long-term follow-up of their oral lesions, it was hoped to determine if these mutations were related to disease progression. METHODS: Eight patients presenting with lesions diagnosed clinically as oral leukoplakia or lichen planus were followed from 2 to 12 years. Two to five samples of archival biopsy tissue were analysed from each patient by constant denaturant gradient gel electrophoresis for hotspots A, B, C, D and exon 6. RESULTS: Four patients were diagnosed clinically as OLP: two of these were confirmed histopathologically, one was diagnosed as non-specific hyperkeratosis and one as cancer. Four patients had leukoplakia only, with a histopathological diagnosis of hyperkeratosis. Seven patients had TP53 mutations, three of them on repeated occasions. All five patients who developed squamous-cell carcinoma had mutations. Two of them had mutated pre-malignant lesions, and one of these previously had a non-mutated cancer. Three patients had two different primary cancers, only one of them mutated. One patient developed a mutated cancer 5 years after the last mutation-free biopsy. Of the cancer-free patients, a lesion regarded clinically as cancer-suspicious in one case was mutated, in another patient two OLP lesions were mutated, the third had five biopsies taken during 8 years, all non-mutated. CONCLUSIONS: TP53 mutations may occur early or late in the development of oral squamous-cell carcinoma.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]