4.7 Article

Mutational Analysis and Clinical Correlation of Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

Journal

CANCER
Volume 120, Issue 10, Pages 1482-1490

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.28599

Keywords

colorectal cancer; mutation; clinicopathologic; NRAS; BRAF

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Funding

  1. N-of-One

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BACKGROUNDEarly identification of mutations may guide patients with metastatic colorectal cancer toward targeted therapies that may be life prolonging. The authors assessed tumor genotype correlations with clinical characteristics to determine whether mutational profiling can account for clinical similarities, differences, and outcomes. METHODSUnder Institutional Review Board approval, 222 patients with metastatic colon adenocarcinoma (n=158) and rectal adenocarcinoma (n=64) who underwent clinical tumor genotyping were reviewed. Multiplexed tumor genotyping screened for >150 mutations across 15 commonly mutated cancer genes. The chi-square test was used to assess genotype frequency by tumor site and additional clinical characteristics. Cox multivariate analysis was used to assess the impact of genotype on overall survival. RESULTSBroad-based tumor genotyping revealed clinical and anatomic differences that could be linked to gene mutations. NRAS mutations were associated with rectal cancer versus colon cancer (12.5% vs 0.6%; P<.001) and with age 56 years (7% vs 0.9%; P=.02). Conversely, v-raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B (BRAF) mutations were associated with colon cancer (13% vs 3%; P=.024) and older age (15.8% vs 4.6%; P=.006). TP53 mutations were associated with rectal cancer (30% vs 18%; P=.048), younger age (14% vs 28.7%; P=.007), and men (26.4% vs 14%; P=.03). Lung metastases were associated with PIK3CA mutations (23% vs 8.7%; P=.004). Only mutations in BRAF were independently associated with decreased overall survival (hazard ratio, 2.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.09-5.27; P=.029). CONCLUSIONSThe current study suggests that underlying molecular profiles can differ between colon and rectal cancers. Further investigation is warranted to assess whether the differences identified are important in determining the optimal treatment course for these patients. Cancer 2014;120:1482-1490. (c) 2014 American Cancer Society. In this study, NRAS mutations were observed almost exclusively in rectal cancers compared with colon cancers. This result suggests that there may be a biologic difference in metastatic colon and rectal cancers.

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