| Literature DB >> 24265155 |
Hubing Shi1,2, Willy Hugo1,2, Xiangju Kong1,2, Aayoung Hong1,3,2, Richard C Koya4,2, Gatien Moriceau1,2, Thinle Chodon5,2, Rongqing Guo5,2, Douglas B Johnson6,7, Kimberly B Dahlman8,7, Mark C Kelley9,7, Richard F Kefford10, Bartosz Chmielowski5,11,2, John A Glaspy5,11,2, Jeffrey A Sosman6,7, Nicolas van Baren12, Georgina V Long10, Antoni Ribas1,5,11,3,2, Roger S Lo1,11,3,2.
Abstract
BRAF inhibitors elicit rapid antitumor responses in the majority of patients with BRAF(V600)-mutant melanoma, but acquired drug resistance is almost universal. We sought to identify the core resistance pathways and the extent of tumor heterogeneity during disease progression. We show that mitogen-activated protein kinase reactivation mechanisms were detected among 70% of disease-progressive tissues, with RAS mutations, mutant BRAF amplification, and alternative splicing being most common. We also detected PI3K-PTEN-AKT-upregulating genetic alterations among 22% of progressive melanomas. Distinct molecular lesions in both core drug escape pathways were commonly detected concurrently in the same tumor or among multiple tumors from the same patient. Beyond harboring extensively heterogeneous resistance mechanisms, melanoma regrowth emerging from BRAF inhibitor selection displayed branched evolution marked by altered mutational spectra/signatures and increased fitness. Thus, melanoma genomic heterogeneity contributes significantly to BRAF inhibitor treatment failure, implying upfront, cotargeting of two core pathways as an essential strategy for durable responses.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24265155 PMCID: PMC3936420 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-13-0642
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397