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Dive into the research topics where Barbara Kantorová is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara Kantorová.


Leukemia | 2015

Recurrent mutations refine prognosis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Panagiotis Baliakas; Anastasia Hadzidimitriou; La. Sutton; Davide Rossi; E. Minga; Neus Villamor; Marta Larrayoz; Jana Kmínková; Andreas Agathangelidis; Zadie Davis; Eugen Tausch; Evangelia Stalika; Barbara Kantorová; Larry Mansouri; Lydia Scarfò; Diego Cortese; Veronika Navrkalová; Mj. Rose-Zerilli; Karin E. Smedby; Gunnar Juliusson; Achilles Anagnostopoulos; A. Makris; Alba Navarro; Julio Delgado; David Oscier; Chrysoula Belessi; Stephan Stilgenbauer; Paolo Ghia; Šárka Pospíšilová; G. Gaidano

Through the European Research Initiative on chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) (ERIC), we screened 3490 patients with CLL for mutations within the NOTCH1 (n=3334), SF3B1 (n=2322), TP53 (n=2309), MYD88 (n=1080) and BIRC3 (n=919) genes, mainly at diagnosis (75%) and before treatment (>90%). BIRC3 mutations (2.5%) were associated with unmutated IGHV genes (U-CLL), del(11q) and trisomy 12, whereas MYD88 mutations (2.2%) were exclusively found among M-CLL. NOTCH1, SF3B1 and TP53 exhibited variable frequencies and were mostly enriched within clinically aggressive cases. Interestingly, as the timespan between diagnosis and mutational screening increased, so too did the incidence of SF3B1 mutations; no such increase was observed for NOTCH1 mutations. Regarding the clinical impact, NOTCH1 mutations, SF3B1 mutations and TP53 aberrations (deletion/mutation, TP53ab) correlated with shorter time-to-first-treatment (P<0.0001) in 889 treatment-naive Binet stage A cases. In multivariate analysis (n=774), SF3B1 mutations and TP53ab along with del(11q) and U-CLL, but not NOTCH1 mutations, retained independent significance. Importantly, TP53ab and SF3B1 mutations had an adverse impact even in U-CLL. In conclusion, we support the clinical relevance of novel recurrent mutations in CLL, highlighting the adverse impact of SF3B1 and TP53 mutations, even independent of IGHV mutational status, thus underscoring the need for urgent standardization/harmonization of the detection methods.


Leukemia | 2015

Detailed analysis of therapy-driven clonal evolution of TP53 mutations in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Jitka Malčíková; Katerina Stano-Kozubik; Boris Tichy; Barbara Kantorová; Šárka Pavlová; Nikola Tom; Lenka Radová; Jana Šmardová; Filip Pardy; Michael Doubek; Yvona Brychtová; Marek Mráz; Karla Plevová; Eva Divíšková; Alexandra Oltová; Jiri Mayer; Šárka Pospíšilová; Martin Trbušek

In chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), the worst prognosis is associated with TP53 defects with the affected patients being potentially directed to alternative treatment. Therapy administration was shown to drive the selection of new TP53 mutations in CLL. Using ultra-deep next-generation sequencing (NGS), we performed a detailed analysis of TP53 mutations’ clonal evolution. We retrospectively analyzed samples that were assessed as TP53-wild-type (wt) by FASAY from 20 patients with a new TP53 mutation detected in relapse and 40 patients remaining TP53-wt in relapse. Minor TP53-mutated subclones were disclosed in 18/20 patients experiencing later mutation selection, while only one minor-clone mutation was observed in those patients remaining TP53-wt (n=40). We documented that (i) minor TP53 mutations may be present before therapy and may occur in any relapse; (ii) the majority of TP53-mutated minor clones expand to dominant clone under the selective pressure of chemotherapy, while persistence of minor-clone mutations is rare; (iii) multiple minor-clone TP53 mutations are common and may simultaneously expand. In conclusion, patients with minor-clone TP53 mutations carry a high risk of mutation selection by therapy. Deep sequencing can shift TP53 mutation identification to a period before therapy administration, which might be of particular importance for clinical trials.


Leukemia | 2018

Low-burden TP53 mutations in chronic phase of myeloproliferative neoplasms: association with age, hydroxyurea administration, disease type and JAK2 mutational status

Blanka Kubešová; Šárka Pavlová; Jitka Malčíková; Jitka Kabáthová; Lenka Radová; Nikola Tom; Boris Tichy; Karla Plevová; Barbara Kantorová; Kristýna Fiedorová; Martina Sláviková; V Bystry; Jarmila Kissová; Bettina Gisslinger; Heinz Gisslinger; Miroslav Penka; Jiří Mayer; Robert Kralovics; Šárka Pospíšilová; Michael Doubek

The multistep process of TP53 mutation expansion during myeloproliferative neoplasm (MPN) transformation into acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has been documented retrospectively. It is currently unknown how common TP53 mutations with low variant allele frequency (VAF) are, whether they are linked to hydroxyurea (HU) cytoreduction, and what disease progression risk they carry. Using ultra-deep next-generation sequencing, we examined 254 MPN patients treated with HU, interferon alpha-2a or anagrelide and 85 untreated patients. We found TP53 mutations in 50 cases (0.2–16.3% VAF), regardless of disease subtype, driver gene status and cytoreduction. Both therapy and TP53 mutations were strongly associated with older age. Over-time analysis showed that the mutations may be undetectable at diagnosis and slowly increase during disease course. Although three patients with TP53 mutations progressed to TP53-mutated or TP53-wild-type AML, we did not observe a significant age-independent impact on overall survival during the follow-up. Further, we showed that complete p53 inactivation alone led to neither blast transformation nor HU resistance. Altogether, we revealed patients age as the strongest factor affecting low-burden TP53 mutation incidence in MPN and found no significant age-independent association between TP53 mutations and hydroxyurea. Mutations may persist at low levels for years without an immediate risk of progression.


British Journal of Haematology | 2016

Decreased WNT3 expression in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia is a hallmark of disease progression and identifies patients with worse prognosis in the subgroup with mutated IGHV

Lucie Poppová; Pavlína Janovská; Karla Plevová; Lenka Radová; Hana Plešingerová; Marek Borsky; Jana Kotašková; Barbara Kantorová; Michaela Hlozkova; Jana Figulová; Yvona Brychtová; Michaela Máchalová; Milan Urík; Michael Doubek; Alois Kozubík; Šárka Pospíšilová; Šárka Pavlová; Vitezslav Bryja

The canonical Wnt pathway, dependent on β‐catenin‐controlled transcription, is the most explored Wnt pathway, known to drive the malignant transformation of multiple cell types. Several reports have suggested that this pathway also participates in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) pathogenesis. To get a better insight into the role of the Wnt/β‐catenin pathway in CLL we analysed in detail the expression of the most overexpressed Wnt ligand, encoded by the WNT3 gene, in a well‐defined cohort of 137 CLL patients. Our analysis demonstrated that (i) untreated patients with more aggressive disease (with a notable exception of patients with 11q deletion) express less WNT3, (ii) WNT3 declines with disease progression in a significant proportion of patients and (iii) low WNT3 was identified as a strong independent marker indicating shorter treatment‐free survival in CLL patients with IGHV mutation. Interestingly, CLL‐related lymphoid cell lines, but not stromal cells, failed to respond to the ligand‐induced activation of the Wnt/β‐catenin pathway. This opens the possibility that CLL cells use Wnt‐3 to communicate with the cells in the microenvironment. We thus propose that the Wnt/β‐catenin pathway plays a more complex role in CLL pathogenesis than previously anticipated.


Leukemia Research | 2017

Fragment analysis represents a suitable approach for the detection of hotspot c.7541_7542delCT NOTCH1 mutation in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Eva Vávrová; Barbara Kantorová; Barbara Vonková; Jitka Kabáthová; Hana SkuhrováFrancová; Eva Divíšková; Ondrej Letocha; Jana Kotašková; Yvona Brychtová; Michael Doubek; Jiri Mayer; Šárka Pospíšilová

The hotspot c.7541_7542delCT NOTCH1 mutation has been proven to have a negative clinical impact in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). However, an optimal method for its detection has not yet been specified. The aim of our study was to examine the presence of the NOTCH1 mutation in CLL using three commonly used molecular methods. Sanger sequencing, fragment analysis and allele-specific PCR were compared in the detection of the c.7541_7542delCT NOTCH1 mutation in 201 CLL patients. In 7 patients with inconclusive mutational analysis results, the presence of the NOTCH1 mutation was also confirmed using ultra-deep next generation sequencing. The NOTCH1 mutation was detected in 15% (30/201) of examined patients. Only fragment analysis was able to identify all 30 NOTCH1-mutated patients. Sanger sequencing and allele-specific PCR showed a lower detection efficiency, determining 93% (28/30) and 80% (24/30) of the present NOTCH1 mutations, respectively. Considering these three most commonly used methodologies for c.7541_7542delCT NOTCH1 mutation screening in CLL, we defined fragment analysis as the most suitable approach for detecting the hotspot NOTCH1 mutation.


Tumor Biology | 2015

TP53 mutation analysis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia: comparison of different detection methods

Barbara Kantorová; Jitka Malčíková; Jana Šmardová; Šárka Pavlová; Martin Trbušek; Nikola Tom; Karla Plevová; Boris Tichy; Sim Truong; Eva Divíšková; Jana Kotašková; Alexandra Oltová; Nancy Patten; Yvona Brychtová; Michael Doubek; Jiri Mayer; Šárka Pospíšilová


British Journal of Haematology | 2017

Single cell analysis revealed a coexistence of NOTCH1 and TP53 mutations within the same cancer cells in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia patients.

Barbara Kantorová; Jitka Malčíková; Kamila Brázdilová; Marek Borsky; Karla Plevová; Jana Šmardová; Lenka Radová; Nikola Tom; Martin Trbušek; Eva Divíšková; Hana Skuhrová Francová; Navrkalova; Michael Doubek; Yvona Brychtová; Jiří Mayer; Šárka Pospíšilová


Archive | 2017

CALR mutační profil pacientů se suspektní Ph-negativní myeloproliferací

Martina Sláviková; Jarmila Šimová; Barbora Kubová; J. Mazurová; R. Měch; J. Žmolíková; Barbara Kantorová; Zuzana Vrzalová; R. Skalíková; P. Heranová; Magdalena Uvirova; Šárka Pospíšilová; Michael Doubek


Archive | 2017

Somatické mutace v genu CALR u pacientů se suspektní Ph-negativní myeloproliferací

Jarmila Šimová; Martina Sláviková; Barbora Kubová; Jiří Štika; Michaela Smolíková; Barbara Kantorová; Radek Měch; David Konvalinka; Andrea Krokerová; Magdalena Uvirova; Šárka Pospíšilová; Michael Doubek


Archive | 2016

Single cell analysis of clonality in chronic lymphocyticleukemia patients with multiple immunoglobulin generearrangement.

Kamila Brázdilová; Karla Plevová; Hana Skuhrová Francová; Helena Kočková; Magdaléna Chmelíková; Marek Borský; Kateřina Burčková; Barbara Kantorová; Boris Tichý; Hana Škabrahová; Yvona Brychtová; Jiří Mayer; Michael Doubek; Šárka Pospíšilová

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Šárka Pospíšilová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Michael Doubek

Charles University in Prague

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Jitka Malčíková

Central European Institute of Technology

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Karla Plevová

Central European Institute of Technology

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Nikola Tom

Central European Institute of Technology

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Šárka Pavlová

Central European Institute of Technology

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Boris Tichý

Central European Institute of Technology

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Veronika Navrkalová

Central European Institute of Technology

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Lenka Radová

Central European Institute of Technology

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