4.5 Article

Landscape of mutations in early stage primary cutaneous melanoma: An InterMEL study

Journal

PIGMENT CELL & MELANOMA RESEARCH
Volume 35, Issue 6, Pages 605-612

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pcmr.13058

Keywords

multi-omic profiling; primary melanoma; prognostic models; tumor mutations

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health [1P01CA206980-01A1, R01CA251339, R01CA233524, R33CA160138]
  2. University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center [NCI 5P30CA118100-15]
  3. UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center [NCI P30CA016086]
  4. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center [P30 CA008748]
  5. University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center [NCI P30016672]
  6. McCarthy Skin Cancer Research Fund
  7. Miriam and Jim Mulva Research Fund
  8. Marit Peterson Fund for Melanoma Research
  9. Irving and Nadine Mansfield and Robert David Levitt Cancer Research Chair
  10. Char and Chuck Fowler Family Foundation
  11. Roswell Park Alliance Foundation
  12. Cleveland Foundation
  13. Melanoma SPORE [NIH/NCI P50CA225450, NIH/NCI P50CA221703]
  14. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [NIEHS P30ES010126]
  15. University of North Carolina Center for Environmental Health and Susceptibility
  16. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [NIH/NGMS:1T32GM135128]
  17. NHMRC [2008454]
  18. NIH/NCI [1K08 CA151645-01]
  19. RE Leet and CG Patterson Trust Awards
  20. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC) [APP1141295]
  21. Cameron Family
  22. [R01 CA12118]
  23. [R21 CA245577]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study examines the genomic landscape of early-stage melanomas and identifies different driver mutation sub-types, highlighting the clinical and pathological characteristics associated with each subtype. These findings provide important insights into the development and metastasis of melanoma.
It is unclear why some melanomas aggressively metastasize while others remain indolent. Available studies employing multi-omic profiling of melanomas are based on large primary or metastatic tumors. We examine the genomic landscape of early-stage melanomas diagnosed prior to the modern era of immunological treatments. Untreated cases with Stage II/III cutaneous melanoma were identified from institutions throughout the United States, Australia and Spain. FFPE tumor sections were profiled for mutation, methylation and microRNAs. Preliminary results from mutation profiling and clinical pathologic correlates show the distribution of four driver mutation sub-types: 31% BRAF; 18% NRAS; 21% NF1; 26% Triple Wild Type. BRAF mutant tumors had younger age at diagnosis, more associated nevi, more tumor infiltrating lymphocytes, and fewer thick tumors although at generally more advanced stage. NF1 mutant tumors were frequent on the head/neck in older patients with severe solar elastosis, thicker tumors but in earlier stages. Triple Wild Type tumors were predominantly male, frequently on the leg, with more perineural invasion. Mutations in TERT, TP53, CDKN2A and ARID2 were observed often, with TP53 mutations occurring particularly frequently in the NF1 sub-type. The InterMEL study will provide the most extensive multi-omic profiling of early-stage melanoma to date. Initial results demonstrate a nuanced understanding of the mutational and clinicopathological landscape of these early-stage tumors.

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