Biomarker Research (Feb 2024)

A patient with multiple primary malignant neoplasms with high variant allele frequencies of RB1, TP53, and TERT

  • Mingyang Ma,
  • Kun Shang,
  • Jiewei Wang,
  • Xiaojing Teng,
  • Peng Li,
  • Jing Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40364-024-00567-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 3

Abstract

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Abstract Multiple primary malignant neoplasms are a rare disease with tumors of different histology or morphology arising in various sites. Next-generation sequencing is essential in the etiology, diagnosis, treatment, and surveillance of this disease. No eight primary malignant neoplasm cases with high variant allele frequencies of RB1, TP53, and TERT have been reported. Herein, we report a 65-year-old male who exhibited eight primary malignancies of the vocal cord, pharynx, kidney, mouth floor, esophagus, and urinary bladder with different pathological types. The first seven tumors were early-stage tumors; the last tumor, small cell carcinoma of urinary bladder, showed liver metastasis at diagnosis. Next-generation sequencing results revealed extremely high somatic variant allele frequencies of RB1 c.1472 T > C, TP53 c.576A > G, and TERT c.-58-u66C > T (95.5%, 95.1%, and 51.0%, respectively). No germline mutations were detected. These findings denoted a heavy tumor burden and poor prognosis. This is the first report of eight primary malignant neoplasm cases with high variant allele frequencies of RB1, TP53, and TERT.

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