Elucidating therapeutic molecular targets in premenopausal Asian women with recurrent breast cancers
Breast cancer is an increasing problem in Asia, with a higher proportion of premenopausal patients who are at higher risk of recurrence. Targeted sequencing was performed on DNA extracted from primary tumor specimens of 63 premenopausal Asian patients who relapsed after initial diagnosis of non-meta...
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Veröffentlicht in: | NPJ breast cancer 2018-07, Vol.4 (1), p.19-7, Article 19 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Breast cancer is an increasing problem in Asia, with a higher proportion of premenopausal patients who are at higher risk of recurrence. Targeted sequencing was performed on DNA extracted from primary tumor specimens of 63 premenopausal Asian patients who relapsed after initial diagnosis of non-metastatic breast cancer. The most prevalent alterations included:
TP53
(65%);
PIK3CA
(32%);
GATA3
(29%);
ERBB2
(27%);
MYC
(25%);
KMT2C
(21%);
MCL1
(17%);
PRKDC, TPR, BRIP1
(14%);
MDM4, PCDH15, PRKAR1A, CDKN1B
(13%);
CCND1, KMT2D, STK11
, and
MLH1
(11%). Sixty of the 63 patients (95%) had at least one genetic alteration in a signaling pathway related to cell cycle or p53 signaling. The presence of
MCL1
amplification, HIF-1-alpha transcription factor network pathway alterations, and direct p53 effectors pathway alterations were independent predictors of inferior overall survival from initial diagnosis. Comparison with non-Asian premenopausal tumors in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) revealed a higher prevalence of
TP53
mutations among HER2-positive cancers, and more frequent
TP53, TET2
, and
CDK12
mutations among hormone receptor-positive HER2-negative cancers in our cohort. Given the limited number of non-Asian premenopausal breast cancers that had relapsed in TCGA, we compared the frequency of mutations in our cohort with 43 premenopausal specimens from both TCGA and International Cancer Genome Consortium that had relapsed. There was a trend toward higher prevalence of
TP53
mutations in our cohort. Certain genomic aberrations may be enriched in tumors of poor-prognosis premenopausal Asian breast cancers. The development of novel therapies targeting these aberrations merit further research.
Ethnic diversity: distinct molecular profiles in tumors from premenopausal Asian women
Younger women in Asia with recurrent breast cancer seem to have a higher rate of mutations in the tumor suppressor gene
TP53
than do women elsewhere—a finding that could guide drug development in Asia. Yoon-Sim Yap from the
National Cancer Centre Singapore and coworkers sequenced DNA extracted from the tumor samples of 63 premenopausal women from Singapore and South Korea who relapsed following treatment for non-metastatic breast cancer. The researchers analyzed hundreds of cancer-related genes, and found that the vast majority of women harbored mutations in at least one gene linked to regulating the cell cycle of
TP53
signaling. The prevalence of mutations in certain genes, including
TP53
itse |
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ISSN: | 2374-4677 2374-4677 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41523-018-0070-x |