Myelodysplastic syndrome diagnosis of karyotypically normal patients may be elusive because it relies exclusively on morphological and clinical data. In routine practice, finding of an acquired mutation or a cytogenetic abnormality provides irrefutable evidence of the clonal nature of that disease. Recurrent deletions and somatic mutations in TET2, a gene involved in epigenetic regulation, have been reported in about 20% of adult patients with myelodysplastic syndrome. We report a novel g.95805C>T, nonsense TET2 mutation, leading to a premature stop codon (p.Gln913*), in an adult patient with refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia. © FUNPEC-RP.
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Coutinho, D. F., Diniz, C., Filgueiras, R. L. D., Baista, R. L. R., Ayres-Silva, J. P., Monte-Mór, B. C. R., … Zalcberg, I. R. (2013). A novel TET2 mutation in a patient with refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia. Genetics and Molecular Research, 12(4), 5858–5862. https://doi.org/10.4238/2013.November.22.13
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