Heterogeneity of KRAS, NRAS, BRAF and PIK3CA mutations in metastatic colorectal cancer and potential effects on therapy in the CAPRI GOIM trial

被引:107
作者
Normanno, N. [1 ,2 ]
Rachiglio, A. M. [2 ]
Lambiase, M. [2 ]
Martinelli, E. [3 ]
Fenizia, F. [2 ]
Esposito, C. [2 ]
Roma, C. [2 ]
Troiani, T. [3 ]
Rizzi, D. [4 ]
Tatangelo, F. [5 ]
Botti, G. [5 ]
Maiello, E. [6 ]
Colucci, G. [4 ]
Ciardiello, F. [3 ]
机构
[1] Ist Nazl Tumori Fdn Giovanni Pascale, Cell Biol & Biotherapy Unit, IRCCS, I-80131 Naples, Italy
[2] Ist Nazl Tumori Fdn Giovanni Pascale, Lab Pharmacogen, Ctr Ric Oncol Mercogliano, IRCCS, I-80131 Naples, Italy
[3] Univ Naples 2, Dept Clin & Expt Med F Magrassi Med Oncol, Naples, Italy
[4] Grp Oncol Italia Meridionale, Bari, Italy
[5] Ist Nazl Tumori Fdn Giovanni Pascale, Surg Pathol Unit, IRCCS, I-80131 Naples, Italy
[6] IRCCS Casa Sollievo Sofferenza, Med Oncol Unit, Foggia, Italy
关键词
colorectal cancer; mutations; cetuximab; next-generation sequencing; tumor heterogeneity; FOLFIRI PLUS CETUXIMAB; ANTI-EGFR THERAPY; GENETIC-HETEROGENEITY; TUMOR HETEROGENEITY; TARGETED THERAPIES; EVOLUTION; RESISTANCE; CONCORDANCE; COLON;
D O I
10.1093/annonc/mdv176
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Background: Evidence suggests that metastatic colorectal carcinoma (mCRC) has a high level of intratumor heterogeneity. We carried out a quantitative assessment of tumor heterogeneity for KRAS, NRAS, BRAF and PIK3CA mutations, in order to assess potential clinical implications. Patients and methods: Tumor samples (n = 182) from the CAPRI-GOIM trial of first-line cetuximab + FOLFIRI in KRAS exon-2 wild-type mCRC patients were assessed by next-generation sequencing that allows quantitative assessment of mutant genes. Mutant allelic frequency was normalized for the neoplastic cell content and, assuming that somatic mutations usually affect one allele, the Heterogeneity Score (HS) was calculated by multiplying by 2 the frequency of mutant alleles in neoplastic cells. Therefore, HS virtually corresponds to the fraction of neoplastic cells carrying a specific mutation. Results: The KRAS HS ranged between 12 and 260 with mean value of 87.1 and median value of 84.4, suggesting that in most CRC, the majority of neoplastic cells carry mutant KRAS. Similar findings were observed for NRAS (HS range 35.5-146.7; mean 102.8; median 117.1). In contrast, in BRAF (HS range 17.1-120; mean 54.8; median 54.3) and PIK3CA (HS range 14.3-120; mean 59.5; median 47.3) mutant cases, only a fraction of neoplastic cells seem to carry the mutant allele. The response rate was 70% in KRAS mutant patients with an HS < 33 (low KRAS; n = 10) and 45.7% in KRAS HS > 33 patients (high KRAS; n = 35); median progression-free survival were 7.97 and 8.37 months, respectively. Low-KRAS tumors had a higher frequency of additional mutations in PIK3CA when compared with high-KRAS (6/10 versus 8/35). Conclusions: KRAS and NRAS mutations are usually present in the majority of neoplastic cells, whereas BRAF and PIK3CA mutations often affect a limited fraction of transformed cells. Resistance to cetuximab in low-KRAS patients might be driven by the complex mutational profile rather than KRAS mutation load.
引用
收藏
页码:1710 / 1714
页数:5
相关论文
共 20 条
  • [1] Prevalence and Heterogeneity of KRAS, BRAF, and PIK3CA Mutations in Primary Colorectal Adenocarcinomas and Their Corresponding Metastases
    Baldus, Stephan E.
    Schaefer, Karl-L.
    Engers, Rainer
    Hartleb, Dinah
    Stoecklein, Nikolas H.
    Gabbert, Helmut E.
    [J]. CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH, 2010, 16 (03) : 790 - 799
  • [2] Comparative sequencing analysis reveals high genomic concordance between matched primary and metastatic colorectal cancer lesions
    Brannon, A. Rose
    Vakiani, Efsevia
    Sylvester, Brooke E.
    Scott, Sasinya N.
    McDermott, Gregory
    Shah, Ronak H.
    Kania, Krishan
    Viale, Agnes
    Oschwald, Dayna M.
    Vacic, Vladimir
    Emde, Anne-Katrin
    Cercek, Andrea
    Yaeger, Rona
    Kemeny, Nancy E.
    Saltz, Leonard B.
    Shia, Jinru
    D'Angelica, Michael I.
    Weiser, Martin R.
    Solit, David B.
    Berger, Michael F.
    [J]. GENOME BIOLOGY, 2014, 15 (08):
  • [3] Tumour heterogeneity and the evolution of polyclonal drug resistance
    Burrell, Rebecca A.
    Swanton, Charles
    [J]. MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY, 2014, 8 (06): : 1095 - 1111
  • [4] The causes and consequences of genetic heterogeneity in cancer evolution
    Burrell, Rebecca A.
    McGranahan, Nicholas
    Bartek, Jiri
    Swanton, Charles
    [J]. NATURE, 2013, 501 (7467) : 338 - 345
  • [5] Clinical activity of FOLFIRI plus cetuximab according to extended gene mutation status by next-generation sequencing: findings from the CAPRI-GOIM trial
    Ciardiello, F.
    Normanno, N.
    Maiello, E.
    Martinelli, E.
    Troiani, T.
    Pisconti, S.
    Giuliani, F.
    Barone, C.
    Carteni, G.
    Rachiglio, A. M.
    Montesarchio, V.
    Tonini, G.
    Rizzi, D.
    Cinieri, S.
    Bordonaro, R.
    Febbraro, A.
    De Vita, F.
    Orditura, M.
    Fenizia, F.
    Lambiase, M.
    Rinaldi, A.
    Tatangelo, F.
    Botti, G.
    Colucci, G.
    [J]. ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 2014, 25 (09) : 1756 - 1761
  • [6] The RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK and the PI3K/AKT signalling pathways: role in cancer pathogenesis and implications for therapeutic approaches
    De Luca, Antonella
    Maiello, Monica R.
    D'Alessio, Amelia
    Pergameno, Maria
    Normanno, Nicola
    [J]. EXPERT OPINION ON THERAPEUTIC TARGETS, 2012, 16 : S17 - S27
  • [7] KRAS, BRAF, PIK3CA, and PTEN mutations: implications for targeted therapies in metastatic colorectal cancer
    De Roock, Wendy
    De Vriendt, Veerle
    Normanno, Nicola
    Ciardiello, Fortunato
    Tejpar, Sabine
    [J]. LANCET ONCOLOGY, 2011, 12 (06) : 594 - 603
  • [8] Panitumumab-FOLFOX4 Treatment and RAS Mutations in Colorectal Cancer
    Douillard, Jean-Yves
    Oliner, Kelly S.
    Siena, Salvatore
    Tabernero, Josep
    Burkes, Ronald
    Barugel, Mario
    Humblet, Yves
    Bodoky, Gyorgy
    Cunningham, David
    Jassem, Jacek
    Rivera, Fernando
    Kocakova, Ilona
    Ruff, Paul
    Blasinska-Morawiec, Maria
    Smakal, Martin
    Canon, Jean Luc
    Rother, Mark
    Williams, Richard
    Rong, Alan
    Wiezorek, Jeffrey
    Sidhu, Roger
    Patterson, Scott D.
    [J]. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2013, 369 (11) : 1023 - 1034
  • [9] FOLFIRI plus cetuximab versus FOLFIRI plus bevacizumab as first-line treatment for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (FIRE-3): a randomised, open-label, phase 3 trial
    Heinemann, Volker
    von Weikersthal, Ludwig Fischer
    Decker, Thomas
    Kiani, Alexander
    Vehling-Kaiser, Ursula
    Al-Batran, Salah-Eddin
    Heintges, Tobias
    Lerchenmueller, Christian
    Kahl, Christoph
    Seipelt, Gernot
    Kullmann, Frank
    Stauch, Martina
    Scheithauer, Werner
    Hielscher, Joerg
    Scholz, Michael
    Mueller, Sebastian
    Link, Hartmut
    Niederle, Norbert
    Rost, Andreas
    Hoeffkes, Heinz-Gert
    Moehler, Markus
    Lindig, Reinhard U.
    Modest, Dominik P.
    Rossius, Lisa
    Kirchner, Thomas
    Jung, Andreas
    Stintzing, Sebastian
    [J]. LANCET ONCOLOGY, 2014, 15 (10) : 1065 - 1075
  • [10] PLX4032 in metastatic colorectal cancer patients with mutant BRAF tumors.
    Kopetz, S.
    Desai, J.
    Chan, E.
    Hecht, J. R.
    O'Dwyer, P. J.
    Lee, R. J.
    Nolop, K. B.
    Saltz, L.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2010, 28 (15)