4.6 Article

Clinical sequencing identifies potential actionable alterations in a high rate of urachal and primary bladder adenocarcinomas

Journal

CANCER MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages 9041-9054

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cam4.5639

Keywords

molecular genetics; Oncomine; primary bladder adenocarcinoma; targeted therapy; urachal cancer

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this study, a data-processing pipeline was developed for the detection and interpretation of genetic alterations in two rare cancers. The analysis revealed a high rate of actionable mutations, suggesting potential feasibility for the treatment of urachal adenocarcinoma and primary bladder adenocarcinoma.
ObjectiveAdministration of targeted therapies provides a promising treatment strategy for urachal adenocarcinoma (UrC) or primary bladder adenocarcinoma (PBAC); however, the selection of appropriate drugs remains difficult. Here, we aimed to establish a routine compatible methodological pipeline for the identification of the most important therapeutic targets and potentially effective drugs for UrC and PBAC. MethodsNext-generation sequencing, using a 161 cancer driver gene panel, was performed on 41 UrC and 13 PBAC samples. Clinically relevant alterations were filtered, and therapeutic interpretation was performed by in silico evaluation of drug-gene interactions. ResultsAfter data processing, 45/54 samples passed the quality control. Sequencing analysis revealed 191 pathogenic mutations in 68 genes. The most frequent gain-of-function mutations in UrC were found in KRAS (33%), and MYC (15%), while in PBAC KRAS (25%), MYC (25%), FLT3 (17%) and TERT (17%) were recurrently affected. The most frequently affected pathways were the cell cycle regulation, and the DNA damage control pathway. Actionable mutations with at least one available approved drug were identified in 31/33 (94%) UrC and 8/12 (67%) PBAC patients. ConclusionsIn this study, we developed a data-processing pipeline for the detection and therapeutic interpretation of genetic alterations in two rare cancers. Our analyses revealed actionable mutations in a high rate of cases, suggesting that this approach is a potentially feasible strategy for both UrC and PBAC treatments.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available