4.7 Article

Clinical correlation of extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer genomics

期刊

ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY
卷 27, 期 4, 页码 642-647

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdw005

关键词

small-cell lung cancer; gene mutations; genomic analysis; survival; TP53; RB1

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资金

  1. University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center
  2. Case School of Medicine
  3. Clinical & Translational Science Collaborative of Cleveland to build the SCLC TMA (National Institute of Health) [UL1TR000439]
  4. Gene Expression & Genotyping Core
  5. Tissue Resources Core of the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center (National Institute of Health) [P30 CA43703]

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The genomic landscape of 'every-day' small-cell lung cancer demonstrates frequent mutation of genes mediating epigenetic regulation and mTOR pathway activity. Low-frequency, targetable mutations are also observed in FGFR1, KIT, PTCH1 and RET. Tumors harboring wild-type RB1 demonstrated significantly worse response to first-line chemotherapy.Genomic studies in small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) lag far behind those carried out in nonsmall-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). To date, most SCLC studies have evaluated patients with surgically resectable disease. Here we sought to evaluate the genomic mutation spectrum of 'every-day' SCLC patient tumors with extensive stage disease (ES-SCLC) and to correlate mutations with the main clinical outcomes of response to chemotherapy, progression-free (PFS) and overall (OS) survival. A total of 50 SCLC patient tumors were examined in this study; targeted exome sequencing was obtained on 42 patients and whole-exome sequencing on 8 patients. Mutated genes were correlated with clinical outcomes using Kaplan-Meier methods (PFS, OS) and logistic regression (chemo-response). RB1 protein expression was detected by either western blotting of cultured cell lysates or immunohistochemistry of tumor specimens. In all, 39 patients had ES-SCLC; 15 patients had either primary refractory/resistant disease and 21 patients had sensitive disease. The two most frequently mutated genes were TP53 (86%) and RB1 (58%); other frequently mutated genes (> 10% patients) were involved in epigenetic regulation as well as the mTOR pathway. We identified a number of low-frequency, targetable mutations, including RICTOR, FGFR1, KIT, PTCH1 and RET. Using multivariate analysis, RB1 was the only significant factor (P = 0.038) in predicting response to first-line chemotherapy, with an odds ratio of 5.58 comparing mutant RB1 with wild-type. Patients with mutant RB1 had both better OS (11.7 versus 9.1 months P = 0.04) and PFS (11.2 versus 8.6 months, P = 0.06) compared with patients with wild-type RB1. Interestingly, similar to 25% of SCLC cell lines and tumor specimens expressed RB1 protein, possibly representing the subgroup with wild-type RB1. We found that SCLC tumors harboring no mutation in RB1 had a poor response to chemotherapy.

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