| Literature DB >> 25124163 |
Albrecht Stenzinger1, Nicole Pfarr, Volker Endris, Roland Penzel, Lina Jansen, Thomas Wolf, Esther Herpel, Arne Warth, Frederick Klauschen, Matthias Kloor, Wilfried Roth, Hendrik Bläker, Jenny Chang-Claude, Hermann Brenner, Michael Hoffmeister, Wilko Weichert.
Abstract
Recent molecular profiling studies reported a new class of ultramutated colorectal cancers (CRCs), which are caused by exonuclease domain mutations (EDMs) in DNA polymerase ϵ (POLE). Data on the clinical implications of these findings as to whether these mutations define a unique CRC entity with distinct clinical outcome are lacking. We performed Sanger sequencing of the POLE exonuclease domain in 431 well-characterized patients with microsatellite stable (MSS) CRCs of a population-based patient cohort. Mutation data were analyzed for associations with major epidemiological, clinical, genetic, and pathological parameters including overall survival (OS) and disease-specific survival (DSS). In 373 of 431 MSS CRC, all exons of the exonuclease domain were analyzable. Fifty-four mutations were identified in 46 of these samples (12.3%). Besides already reported EDMs, we detected many new mutations in exons 13 and 14 (corresponding to amino acids 410-491) as well as in exon 9 and exon 11 (corresponding to aa 268-303 and aa 341-369). However, we did not see any significant associations of EDMs with clinicopathological parameters, including sex, age, tumor location and tumor stage, CIMP, KRAS, and BRAF mutations. While with a median follow-up time of 5.0 years, survival analysis of the whole cohort revealed nonsignificantly different adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) of 1.35 (95% CI: 0.82-2.25) and 1.44 (0.81-2.58) for OS and DSS indicating slightly impaired survival of patients with EDMs, subgroup analysis for patients with stage III/IV disease receiving chemotherapy revealed a statistically significantly increased adjusted HR (1.87; 95%CI: 1.02-3.44). In conclusion, POLE EDMs do not appear to define an entirely new clinically distinct disease entity in CRC but may have prognostic or predictive implications in CRC subgroups, whose significance remains to be investigated in future studies.Entities:
Keywords: Colorectal cancer; DACHS; MSS; POLE; mutation; polymerase ϵ; ultramutator phenotype
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25124163 PMCID: PMC4298379 DOI: 10.1002/cam4.305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Med ISSN: 2045-7634 Impact factor: 4.452
Prevalence of POLE EDMs and associations with clinical factors
| POLE mutation | Mutation in… | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | Exon 9 | Exon 11 | Exon 13 | Exon 14 | ||
| All patients | 322 (87%) | 46 (13%) | – | 11 (3%) | 7 (2%) | 20 (5%) | 11 (3%) |
| Age <70 | 174 (87%) | 27 (13%) | 9 (4%) | 4 (2%) | 11 (5%) | 5 (2%) | |
| Age 70+ | 148 (89%) | 19 (11%) | 0.55 | 2 (1%) | 3 (2%) | 9 (5%) | 6 (4%) |
| Female | 125 (89%) | 15 (11%) | 4 (3%) | 3 (2%) | 6 (4%) | 3 (2%) | |
| Male | 197 (86%) | 31 (14%) | 0.42 | 7 (3%) | 4 (2%) | 14 (6%) | 8 (4%) |
| Stage I | 55 (83%) | 11 (17%) | 2 (3%) | 1 (2%) | 4 (6%) | 5 (8%) | |
| Stage II | 105 (89%) | 13 (11%) | 3 (3%) | 4 (3%) | 5 (4%) | 2 (2%) | |
| Stage III | 116 (90%) | 13 (10%) | 2 (2%) | 1 (1%) | 7 (6%) | 3 (2%) | |
| Stage IV | 46 (84%) | 9 (16%) | 0.44 | 4 (7%) | 1 (2%) | 4 (7%) | 1 (2%) |
| Grade 1 + 2 | 187 (87%) | 29 (13%) | 8 (4%) | 3 (1%) | 11 (5%) | 8 (4%) | |
| Grade 3 + 4 | 85 (87%) | 13 (13%) | 0.97 | 2 (2%) | 4 (4%) | 6 (6%) | 3 (3%) |
| Location | |||||||
| Colon, proximal | 85 (87%) | 13 (13%) | 5 (5%) | 3 (3%) | 5 (5%) | 2 (2%) | |
| Colon, distal | 94 (89%) | 12 (11%) | 3 (3%) | 3 (3%) | 5 (5%) | 2 (2%) | |
| Rectum | 140 (87%) | 21 (13%) | 0.89 | 3 (2%) | 1 (1%) | 10 (6%) | 7 (4%) |
| BMI | |||||||
| <25 kg/m2 | 106 (89%) | 13 (11%) | 5 (4%) | 1 (1%) | 5 (4%) | 2 (2%) | |
| 25–<30 kg/m2 | 147 (87%) | 22 (13%) | 5 (3%) | 4 (2%) | 9 (5%) | 5 (3%) | |
| 30+ kg/m2 | 62 (89%) | 8 (11%) | 0.85 | 1 (1%) | 1 (1%) | 5 (7%) | 2 (3%) |
| Nonsmoking | 150 (88%) | 21 (12%) | 5 (3%) | 4 (2%) | 8 (5%) | 5 (3%) | |
| Former smoking | 109 (88%) | 15 (12%) | 3 (2%) | 1 (1%) | 9 (7%) | 3 (2%) | |
| Current smoking | 61 (86%) | 10 (14%) | 0.91 | 3 (4%) | 2 (3%) | 3 (4%) | 3 (4%) |
| Family history CRC | |||||||
| Yes | 50 (96%) | 2 (4%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 2 (4%) | 0 (0%) | |
| No/unknown | 270 (86%) | 44 (14%) | 0.04 | 11 (4%) | 7 (2%) | 18 (6%) | 11 (4%) |
| KRAS, wildtype | 220 (88%) | 30 (12%) | 9 (4%) | 4 (2%) | 13 (5%) | 6 (2%) | |
| KRAS, mutation | 80 (84%) | 15 (16%) | 0.32 | 2 (2%) | 3 (3%) | 7 (7%) | 4 (4%) |
| KRAS, missing | 21 | 1 | |||||
| BRAF, wildtype | 287 (87%) | 41 (13%) | 10 (3%) | 7 (2%) | 18 (5%) | 9 (3%) | |
| BRAF, mutation | 24 (89%) | 3 (11%) | 0.98 | 0 (0%) | 0 (%) | 1 (4%) | 2 (7%) |
| BRAF, missing | 7 | 2 | |||||
| CIMP low/neg | 309 (88%) | 43 (12%) | 10 (3%) | 7 (2%) | 19 (5%) | 10 (3%) | |
| CIMP high | 13 (81%) | 3 (19%) | 0.44 | 1 (6%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (6%) | 1 (6%) |
Distal colon from splenic flexure to sigmoid colon, rectum includes rectosigmoid.
BMI on average 10 years prior to diagnosis (range 5–14 years).
Figure 1Distribution of POLE mutations within the exonuclease domain.
Detailed account of POLE EDMs per exon. (A) Exon 9, (B) Exon 11, (C) Exon 13, (D) Exon 14
| cDNA | Amino acid | Frequency | COSMIC | MutationTaster | PolyPhen | PROVEAN | SIFT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (A) Exon 9 | |||||||
| c.805C>T | p.P269S | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.808G>A | p.V270M | 2 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Not tolerated | ||
| c.829G>A | p.E277K | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.836C>T | p.T279I | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.857C>T | p.P286L | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.859G>A | p.D287N | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.862G>A | p.A288T | 1 | Disease causing | ||||
| c.869C>T | T290I | 1 | Disease causing | Deleterious | |||
| c.901G>A | p.D301N | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.909 + 1G>A | p.splice? | 2 | Splice defect? | ||||
| (B) Exon 11 | |||||||
| c.1033C>T | p.Q345* | 1 | Truncating | ||||
| c.1066C>T | p.P356S | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1082C>T | p.T361I | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1099T>G | p.F367V | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1102insT | p.D368* | 1 | Truncating | ||||
| c.1102G>A | p.D368N | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1106G>A | p.W369* | 1 | Truncating | ||||
| (C) Exon 13 | |||||||
| c.1231G>A | p.V411M | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1238G>A | p.R413K | 2 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1252C>T | p.P418S | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1261A>G | p.S421G | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1264C>T | p.H422Y | 3 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | |||
| c.1269T>A | p.N423K | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1270C>G | p.L424V | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1270C>T | p.L424F | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1283C>T | p.A428V | 1 | Disease causing | Deleterious | Not tolerated | ||
| c.1295T>C | p.L432P | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1312G>C | p.E438Q | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1321C>T | p.P441S | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1322C>T | p.P441L | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1334G>A | p.C445Y | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | ||
| c.1337G>C | p.R446P | 1 | Disease causing | Deleterious | |||
| c.1342G>A | p.A448T | 2 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1351C>T | p.Q451* | 2 | Truncating | ||||
| c.1359 + 2C>T | p.splice? | 1 | Splice defect? | ||||
| (D) Exon 14 | |||||||
| c.1361C>T | p.T454I | 1 | Disease causing | ||||
| c.1366G>C | p.A456P | 1 | COSM 937318 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated |
| c.1370C>T | p.T457M | 2 | Disease causing | Deleterious | |||
| c.1376C>T | p.S459F | 2 | COSM 170809 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated |
| c.1382C>T | p.S461L | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1427C>T | p.P476L | 2 | Disease causing | Deleterious | Not tolerated | ||
| c.1430T>C | p.F477S | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1439C>T | p.A480V | 1 | Disease causing | Probably damaging | Deleterious | Not tolerated | |
| c.1472A>G | p.E491G | 1 | Disease causing | Deleterious | Not tolerated | ||
Italic indicates the important terms.
Association of POLE mutational subgroups with overall survival
| Overall survival | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All deaths | Unadjusted HR (95% CI) | Adjusted HR (95% CI) | ||
| No POLE mutation | 322 | 109 (34%) | 1.00 Ref | 1.00 Ref |
| POLE mutation | 46 | 18 (39%) | 1.14 (0.69–1.88) | 1.35 (0.82–2.25) |
| Exon 9 mutation | 11 | 5 (45%) | 1.40 (0.57–3.44) | 1.37 (0.54–3.47) |
| Exon 11 mutation | 7 | 2 (29%) | 0.78 (0.19–3.17) | 0.98 (0.24–4.04) |
| Exon 13 mutation | 20 | 7 (35%) | 1.04 (0.49–2.24) | 1.21 (0.56–2.62) |
| Exon 14 mutation | 11 | 5 (45%) | 1.30 (0.53–3.18) | 1.78 (0.71–4.49) |
| Missense type | 40 | 15 (38%) | 1.09 (0.64–1.88) | 1.41 (0.81–2.43) |
| Splice type | 3 | 2 (67%) | 1.77 (0.44–7.16) | 1.45 (0.35–6.11) |
| Truncating type | 5 | 1 (20%) | 0.54 (0.08–3.84) | 0.44 (0.06–3.18) |
| Known codon forgermline mutation | 4 | 1 (25%) | 0.71 (0.10–5.09) | 0.58 (0.08–4.21) |
| Known codon forsomatic mutation | 4 | 1 (25%) | 0.54 (0.08–3.86) | 1.03 (0.14–7.65) |
| Double mutations | 8 | 1 (13%) | 0.33 (0.05–2.34) | 0.43 (0.06–3.08) |
| Somatic mutations | 42 | 17 (40%) | 1.19 (0.71–1.98) | 1.47 (0.87–2.48) |
| Harmful mutation | 40 | 15 (38%) | 1.06 (0.62–1.81) | 1.26 (0.73–2.18) |
| Nonharmful mutation | 6 | 3 (50%) | 1.88 (0.60–5.92) | 2.27 (0.70–7.39) |
Statistical analysis accounts for late entry, that is, the potentially delayed time period between date of diagnosis and date of interview.
Adjusted for age, sex, stage at diagnosis, location of colorectal cancer (proximal colon/distal colon/rectum), adjuvant and neoadjuvant therapy.
As predicted by in silico analyses.
Putative germline mutations (as reported in the current literature) excluded.
Figure 2Direct adjusted survival curves for the association of POLE mutation and overall survival among patients with colorectal cancer (CRC), stages I-IV. Survival curves are adjusted for age, sex, CRC stage, CRC location, chemotherapy, and neoadjuvant treatment.
Association of POLE EDMs with overall survival in clinical subgroups
| POLE mutation | No POLE mutation | Overall survival | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All deaths | All Deaths | Unadjusted HR (95% CI) | Adjusted HR (95% CI) | |||
| <70 years | 27 | 9 (33%) | 174 | 44 (25%) | 1.41 (0.69–2.88) | 1.25 (0.60–2.63) |
| ≥70 years | 19 | 9 (47%) | 148 | 65 (44%) | 0.95 (0.47–1.91) | 1.72 (0.79–3.76) |
| Female | 15 | 5 (33%) | 125 | 55 (44%) | 0.82 (0.33–2.04) | 0.92 (0.36–2.35) |
| Male | 31 | 13 (42%) | 197 | 54 (27%) | 1.48 (0.81–2.71) | 1.65 (0.89–3.07) |
| Stages I+II | 24 | 4 (17%) | 160 | 29 (18%) | 0.83 (0.29–2.36) | 0.75 (0.26–2.19) |
| Stages III+IV | 22 | 14 (64%) | 162 | 80 (49%) | 1.42 (0.80–2.50) | 1.54 (0.85–2.78) |
| Grade 1 + 2 | 29 | 11 (38%) | 187 | 54 (29%) | 1.34 (0.70–2.57) | 1.87 (0.95–3.67) |
| Grade 3 + 4 | 13 | 7 (54%) | 85 | 38 (45%) | 1.14 (0.51–2.56) | 1.14 (0.49–2.70) |
| Colon, proximal | 13 | 6 (46%) | 85 | 34 (40%) | 1.17 (0.49–2.80) | 1.51 (0.62–3.73) |
| Colon, distal | 12 | 4 (33%) | 94 | 27 (29%) | 1.05 (0.37–3.01) | 1.24 (0.42–3.71) |
| Rectum | 21 | 8 (38%) | 140 | 45 (32%) | 1.19 (0.56–2.52) | 1.44 (0.65–3.20) |
| Chemotherapy, all stages | 20 | 14 (70%) | 129 | 60 (47%) | 1.84 (1.03–3.31) | 1.82 (0.99–3.34) |
| No chemotherapy, all stages | 26 | 4 (15%) | 192 | 48 (25%) | 0.54 (0.19–1.50) | 0.69 (0.24–1.96) |
| Chemotherapy, stages III+IV | 19 | 14 (74%) | 118 | 58 (49%) | 1.84 (1.03–3.32) | 1.87 (1.02–3.44) |
Statistical analysis accounts for late entry, that is, the potentially delayed time period between date of diagnosis and date of interview.
Adjusted for age, sex, stage at diagnosis, location of colorectal cancer (proximal colon/distal colon/rectum), adjuvant and neoadjuvant therapy.
Figure 3Direct adjusted survival curves for the association of POLE mutation and overall survival among patients with colorectal cancer (CRC), stages III+IV, who received chemotherapy. Survival curves are adjusted for age, sex, CRC stage, CRC location, and neoadjuvant treatment.