4.6 Article

NRG1 fusion in a French cohort of invasive mucinous lung adenocarcinoma

Journal

CANCER MEDICINE
Volume 5, Issue 12, Pages 3579-3585

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/cam4.838

Keywords

FISH; invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma; lung adenocarcinoma; molecular oncology; NRG1

Categories

Funding

  1. Fonds de dotation Recherche en Sante Respiratoire
  2. AgiraDom
  3. Comite des maladies respiratoires (COMARES) de l'Isere
  4. Subvention Leg Poix - La Chancellerie des Universites de Paris
  5. ITMO Cancer Institut National du Cancer Plan Cancer Modeles de tumeurs spontanees chez l'animal pour la recherche translationnelle en cancerologie

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Invasive mucinous lung adenocarcinoma (IMA) is a rare subtype of lung adenocarcinoma with no effective treatment option in advanced disease. KRAS mutations occur in 28-87% of the cases. NRG1 fusions were recently discovered in KRAS-negative IMA cases and otherwise negative for known driver oncogenes and could represent an attractive therapeutic target. Published data suggest that NRG1 fusions occur essentially in nonsmoking Asian women. From an IMA cohort of 25 French patients of known ethnicity, driver oncogenes EGFR, KRAS, BRAF, ERBB2 mutations, and ALK and ROS1 rearrangements presence were analyzed. In the IMA samples remaining negative for these driver oncogenes, an NRG1 rearrangement detection was performed by FISH. A driver oncogene was identified in 14/25 IMA, namely 12 KRAS mutations (48%), one ROS1 rearrangement (4%), and one ALK rearrangement (4%). The detection of NRG1 rearrangement by FISH was conducted in the 11 pan-negative IMA. One sample was NRG1 FISH-positive and 100% of the tumor nuclei analyzed were positive. This NRG1-positive patient was a 61-year-old nonsmoking woman of Vietnamese ethnicity and was the sole patient of Asian ethnicity of the cohort. She died 6 months after the diagnosis with a pulmonary multifocal disease. NRG1 FISH detection should be considered in patients with IMA pan-negative for known driver oncogenes. These results might suggest that NRG1 fusion is more frequent in IMA from Asian patient. Larger studies are needed.

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