Frequent p53 Mutations at Dipyrimidine Sites in Patients with Pyothorax-associated Lymphoma

1998 
A high incidence of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the pleural cavity has developed in Japanese patients with long-standing pyothorax (38 years on average) resulting from artificial pneumothorax for the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis or tuberculous pleuritis. Patients with pyothorax-associated lymphoma (PAL) have long been exposed to antituberculous drugs, antibiotics, bacterial or viral products, and frequent diagnostic radiation for the confirmation of pneumothorax and pyothorax. We analyzed p53 mutations on paraffin-embedded specimens from 21 patients with PAL by PCR-single-strand conformational polymorphism followed by direct sequencing. An unusually high frequency of p53 mutations (14 of 21 cases, 67%) was detected in the PAL specimens, and mutations consisted of 13 nucleotide substitutions and 1 deletion. Furthermore, 10 of 13 substitutions (77%) occurred at dipyrimidine sites (CC:GG to CT:GA substitution). Such specificity has not been reported, except for solar light-related skin cancer and AIDS-related lymphoma in some parts. An UV light mimetic agent may be produced in the long history of chronic inflammation in tuberculosis or immunodeficient patients.
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