| Literature DB >> 25656989 |
Hector H Li-Chang1,2,3, Katayoon Kasaian4,5, Ying Ng6, Amy Lum7, Esther Kong8, Howard Lim9,10, Steven Jm Jones11, David G Huntsman12,13,14,15, David F Schaeffer16,17, Stephen Yip18,19,20.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adenocarcinomas of both the gastroesophageal junction and stomach are molecularly complex, but differ with respect to epidemiology, etiology and survival. There are few data directly comparing the frequencies of single nucleotide mutations in cancer-related genes between the two sites. Sequencing of targeted gene panels may be useful in uncovering multiple genomic aberrations using a single test.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25656989 PMCID: PMC4322811 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-015-1021-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1Flow diagram detailing case selection and exclusion for the study cohort.
Summary of the clinocopathologic variables in the cohort’s clinicopathologic variables within cardia and non-cardia adenocarcinomas
| Clinicopathologic variable | Gastroesophageal junction (n = 92) | Non-cardia (n = 75) | Overall (n = 167) | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 61.5 +/- 9.6 [33-80] | 66.3 +/- 11.9 [33-84] | 63.7 +/- 10.9 [33-84] |
|
|
| 0.297 | |||
| Male | 70 (76) | 51 (68) | 121 (73) | |
| Female | 22 (24) | 24 (32) | 46 (27) | |
|
|
| |||
| Intestinal | 65 (71) | 36 (48) | 101 (60) | |
| Diffuse | 15 (16) | 26 (35) | 41 (25) | |
| Mixed | 12 (13) | 13 (17) | 25 (15) | |
|
|
| |||
| IA-B | 10 (11) | 19 (25) | 29 (17) | |
| IIA-B | 60 (65) | 45 (60) | 105 (63) | |
| III-A-C | 22 (24) | 11 (15) | 33 (20) | |
|
| 0.415 | |||
| Well differentiated (G1) | 4 (5) | 10 (6) | ||
| Moderately differentiated (G2) | 39 (42) | 25 (33) | 64 (38) | |
| Poorly differentiated (G3) | 47 (51) | 46 (61) | 93 (56) | |
|
| 0.306 | |||
| Uninvolved | 74 (80) | 65 (87) | 139 (83) | |
| Involved | 18 (20) | 10 (13) | 28 (17) | |
|
| 0.654 | |||
| Absent | 78 (85) | 66 (88) | 144 (86) | |
| Present | 14 (15) | 9 (12) | 23 (14) | |
|
| 0.111 | |||
| Intact | 73 (79) | 51 (68) | 124 (74) | |
| Absent | 19 (21) | 24 (32) | 43 (26) | |
|
|
| |||
| 0 – absent | 32 (35) | 47 (63) | 79 (47) | |
| 1 – normal (1-60%) | 17 (19) | 14 (19) | 31 (19) | |
| 2 - increased (>60%) | 43 (47) | 14 (19) | 57 (34) | |
|
| 0.244 | |||
| Intact | 77 (84) | 57 (76) | 135 (80) | |
| Abnormal | 15 (16) | 18 (24) | 33 (20) | |
|
| 57 (62) | 32 (43) | 89 (53) |
|
|
| 12 | 18 | 15 | |
|
| 69 (75) | 48 (64) | 117 (70) | 0.130 |
|
| 18.0 | 23.0 | 20.0 |
Figure 2Comparison of disease-free survival and overall survival between patients with gastroesophageal and gastric carcinomas. A) Disease free survival was significantly worse for gastroesophageal carcinomas (solid lines) compared to gastric carcinoms (dotted lines), Log-rank test; p = 0.002, though B) overall survival did not differ between the two disease sites (Log-rank test; p = 0.225).
Figure 3Somatic mutations identified in gastroesophageal junction and gastric carcinomas.TP53 mutations were identified in a larger proportion of gastroesophageal junction tumors, while abnormalities in APC/CTNNB1 occurred more frequently in gastric tumors. Black blocks represent truncating mutations, while grey blocks represent missense mutations. Cases and genes in which mutations were not identified are not included.
Figure 4Proportions of GEJ and gastric carcinomas with numbers of identified total and actionable mutations. Solid dark areas in the columns represent cases with 1 mutation, dark diagonal lined areas represent cases with 2 mutations, and spotted areas represent cases with 3 or more mutations.
Figure 5Comparison of the frequency of mutations within hotspots identified in the study cohort using panel sequencing, compared to mutations identified using whole exome sequencing in the TCGA data. A) Mutations across mutational hotspots in the 46 genes in the panel, B) mutations in TP53, C) mutations in KRAS, and D) mutations in the Wnt signaling components APC and CTNNB1.