| Literature DB >> 26537258 |
Alessandro Romanel1, Delila Gasi Tandefelt2, Vincenza Conteduca3, Anuradha Jayaram4, Nicola Casiraghi1, Daniel Wetterskog2, Samanta Salvi5, Dino Amadori5, Zafeiris Zafeiriou4, Pasquale Rescigno4, Diletta Bianchini4, Giorgia Gurioli5, Valentina Casadio5, Suzanne Carreira2, Jane Goodall2, Anna Wingate4, Roberta Ferraldeschi4, Nina Tunariu4, Penny Flohr2, Ugo De Giorgi5, Johann S de Bono4, Francesca Demichelis6, Gerhardt Attard7.
Abstract
Androgen receptor (AR) gene aberrations are rare in prostate cancer before primary hormone treatment but emerge with castration resistance. To determine AR gene status using a minimally invasive assay that could have broad clinical utility, we developed a targeted next-generation sequencing approach amenable to plasma DNA, covering all AR coding bases and genomic regions that are highly informative in prostate cancer. We sequenced 274 plasma samples from 97 castration-resistant prostate cancer patients treated with abiraterone at two institutions. We controlled for normal DNA in patients' circulation and detected a sufficiently high tumor DNA fraction to quantify AR copy number state in 217 samples (80 patients). Detection of AR copy number gain and point mutations in plasma were inversely correlated, supported further by the enrichment of nonsynonymous versus synonymous mutations in AR copy number normal as opposed to AR gain samples. Whereas AR copy number was unchanged from before treatment to progression and no mutant AR alleles showed signal for acquired gain, we observed emergence of T878A or L702H AR amino acid changes in 13% of tumors at progression on abiraterone. Patients with AR gain or T878A or L702H before abiraterone (45%) were 4.9 and 7.8 times less likely to have a ≥50 or ≥90% decline in prostate-specific antigen (PSA), respectively, and had a significantly worse overall [hazard ratio (HR), 7.33; 95% confidence interval (CI), 3.51 to 15.34; P = 1.3 × 10(-9)) and progression-free (HR, 3.73; 95% CI, 2.17 to 6.41; P = 5.6 × 10(-7)) survival. Evaluation of plasma AR by next-generation sequencing could identify cancers with primary resistance to abiraterone.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26537258 PMCID: PMC6112410 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aac9511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956