4.6 Article

Unique Genetic and Survival Characteristics of Invasive Mucinous Adenocarcinoma of the Lung

Journal

JOURNAL OF THORACIC ONCOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages 1156-1162

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1097/JTO.0000000000000579

Keywords

Lung; Adenocarcinoma; Mucinous; Mutation; Gene fusion; Targeted therapy

Funding

  1. Yonsei University College of Medicine [6-2012-0043, 6-2013-0016]
  2. NIH [R21CA161590]
  3. Lungevity Foundation
  4. Upstage Lung Cancer
  5. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [R21CA161590] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Introduction: Invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma is a unique histologic subtype of lung cancer, and our knowledge of its genetic and clinical characteristics is rapidly evolving. Here, we present next-generation sequencing analysis of nucleotide variant and fusion events along with clinical follow-up in a series of lung mucinous adenocarcinoma. Methods: We collected 72 mucinous adenocarcinomas from the United States and Korea. All had been previously assessed for KRAS and EGFR mutations. For KRAS wild-type cases (n = 30), we performed deep targeted next-generation sequencing for gene fusions and nucleotide variants and correlated survival and other clinical features. Results: As expected, KRAS mutations were the most common alteration found (63% of cases); however, the distribution of nucleotide position alterations was more similar to that observed in gastrointestinal tumors than other lung tumors. Within the KRAS-negative cases, we found numerous potentially targetable gene fusions and mutations, including CD74-NRG1, VAMP2-NRG1, TRIM4-BRAF, TPM3-NTRK1, and EML4-ALK gene fusions and ERBB2, BRAF, and PIK3CA mutations. Unexpectedly, we found only two cases with TP53 mutation, which is much lower than observed in lung adenocarcinomas in general. The overall mutation burden was low in histologically confirmed mucinous adenocarcinomas from the public The Cancer Genome Atlas exome data set, regardless of smoking history, suggesting a link between TP53 status and mutation burden in mucinous tumors. There was no significant difference for recurrence-free survival between stagematched mucinous and nonmucinous adenocarcinomas. It was notable that all recurrence sites were in the lungs for completely resected cases. Conclusions: Our data suggest that mucinous adenocarcinoma is typified by (1) frequent KRAS mutations and a growing list of gene fusions, but rare TP53 mutations, (2) a low mutation burden overall, and (3) a recurrence-free survival similar to stage-matched nonmucinous tumors, with recurrences limited to the lungs.

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