Literature DB >> 26981779

Genomic portfolio of Merkel cell carcinoma as determined by comprehensive genomic profiling: implications for targeted therapeutics.

Philip R Cohen1, Brett N Tomson2, Sheryl K Elkin2, Erica Marchlik2, Jennifer L Carter2, Razelle Kurzrock3.   

Abstract

Merkel cell carcinoma is an ultra-rare cutaneous neuroendocrine cancer for which approved treatment options are lacking. To better understand potential actionability, the genomic landscape of Merkel cell cancers was assessed. The molecular aberrations in 17 patients with Merkel cell carcinoma were, on physician request, tested in a Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) laboratory (Foundation Medicine, Cambridge, MA) using next-generation sequencing (182 or 236 genes) and analyzed by N-of-One, Inc. (Lexington, MA). There were 30 genes harboring aberrations and 60 distinct molecular alterations identified in this patient population. The most common abnormalities involved the TP53 gene (12/17 [71% of patients]) and the cell cycle pathway (CDKN2A/B, CDKN2C or RB1) (12/17 [71%]). Abnormalities also were observed in the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway (AKT2, FBXW7, NF1, PIK3CA, PIK3R1, PTEN or RICTOR) (9/17 [53%]) and DNA repair genes (ATM, BAP1, BRCA1/2, CHEK2, FANCA or MLH1) (5/17 [29%]). Possible cognate targeted therapies, including FDA-approved drugs, could be identified in most of the patients (16/17 [94%]). In summary, Merkel cell carcinomas were characterized by multiple distinct aberrations that were unique in the majority of analyzed cases. Most patients had theoretically actionable alterations. These results provide a framework for investigating tailored combinations of matched therapies in Merkel cell carcinoma patients.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Merkel cell carcinoma; genomic landscape; next-generation sequencing; personalized therapy; targeted therapy

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26981779      PMCID: PMC5029639          DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.8032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncotarget        ISSN: 1949-2553


INTRODUCTION

Merkel cell carcinoma is an extremely uncommon, biologically aggressive, cutaneous neuroendocrine cancer [1-4]. It typically presents on sun-exposed skin of elderly men as a rapidly enlarging asymptomatic flesh-colored or blue-red nodule. Local, regional, and distant recurrences are associated with a poor prognostic outcome. Management for localized disease is surgery: a wide local excision and a sentinel lymph node biopsy. A complete lymph node dissection may follow for patients with a positive sentinel lymph node for cancer. In addition, adjuvant radiation therapy is usually given not only to patients with positive sentinel lymph nodes, but also to patients with Merkel cell carcinoma of the head and neck [1-4]. For patients with metastatic disease, chemotherapy is used. Unfortunately, after two to three cycles of treatment, resistance frequently develops. In addition to radiation therapy [5, 6], immunotherapy (such as systemic pembrolizumab [MK-3475] a humanized anti-PD1 antibody [7]) and targeted molecular therapy are investigational approaches that have been used for metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma [8-11]. Due to the rarity of the disease, data regarding response to therapy are often derived from case reports and retrospective series, rather than prospectively performed clinical trials. Thus, it has been challenging to define the role of chemotherapy in management of advanced Merkel cell carcinoma. Systemic chemotherapies currently used include platinum with or without etoposide, as well as cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin and vincristine [3-5]. Modest responses can be achieved with these cytotoxic agents (median progression-free survival of 3 months). Indeed, there are no drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) specifically for Merkel cell carcinoma. Importantly, in Merkel cell carcinomas, several molecular abnormalities have been reported [12-30]. These include overexpression of Hedgehog (Hh) signal pathway proteins, telomerase activation (TERT), tumor suppressor anomalies (TP53, RB1 and SUFU), and tyrosine kinase signaling activation (AKT, KIT, PDGFRA, PIK3CA and PTEN). In addition, chromosomal abnormalities [29] and microRNA alterations [30] have been demonstrated in Merkel cell carcinomas. Clinical trials using a variety of targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors, either as monotherapy or in combination with chemotherapy or one or more additional tyrosine kinase inhibitors, have been initiated for Merkel cell carcinoma. Although a complete response with imatinib (targeting KIT and PDFGR) has been described [31], a low response rate to the agent was observed in a clinical trial [32]. Similarly, a complete response to pazopanib has been observed in Merkel cell carcinoma resistant to chemotherapy [33]; currently, a phase II trail (NCT01841736) is open to evaluate pazopanib in patients with neuroendocrine tumors including Merkel cell carcinoma. However, for several of the current trials, in which these therapies are being given to unselected patients rather than matched to individuals whose tumors harbored cognate aberrations, the results have yet to be reported. Indeed, we are unaware of any trials in which Merkel cell carcinoma patients Merkel cell carcinoma were selected for the presence of specific aberrations and were treated with appropriated targeting agents. Given that additional effective treatment strategies are needed, the genomic profiles of Merkel cell carcinomas, as determined by comprehensive genomic profiling (targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS)), were examined and the data analyzed in the context of potential actionability. Abbreviations: C, case; No., number. 4 cases had more than one molecular aberration in the same gene: case 9 [RB1 = 2], case 13 [TP53 = 3], case 16[TP53 = 2], and case 17 [TP53 = 2]. Aberration is of uncertain clinical significance and relevance of therapeutic strategies is unknown. Aberration is an inactivating alteration and therapeutic strategies are not expected to be relevant. Potentially actionable indicates some evidence in the literature that there are drugs that impact the target. This evidence may derive from clinical observations in other tumors or from preclinical evidence. Activating NOTCH mutations are potentially actionable but the ones in this series were inactivating. Not clear indicates mixed or inconclusive literature evidence for the potential of available drugs to impact the altered gene product.

RESULTS

Genetic aberrations in Merkel cell carcinomas (Tables 1 and 2, Figure 1)

Specific genomic abnormalities were observed in all 17 Merkel cell carcinomas and ranged from one to five alterations per tumor; the median was four. Only two patients (cases 2 and 5) had one aberration and only three patients (cases 1, 7 and 15) had two aberrations. Indeed, more than half of the patients (9/17 [53%]) had four or more genetic anomalies. The most common anomaly among all Merkel cell carcinomas was in the TP53 gene (12/17 patients [71%]). Abnormalities in the cell cycle pathway (CDKN2A/B, CDKN2C or RB1) were also observed in 71% of cases [12/17]. Aberrations in the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway (AKT2, FBXW7, NF1, PIK3CA, PIK3R1, PTEN or RICTOR) were the third most common set of aberrations (9/17 [53%]). Anomalies in DNA repair genes (ATM, BAP1, BRCA1/2, CHEK2, FANCA or MLH1) were seen in 29% (5/17) of patients. Aberrations in either ALK and RET (case 14) or ARIDIA (case 5) were each only noted in 6% (1/17) of patients. Concurrent anomalies in both the cell cycle and PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathways were noted in 35% (6/17) of patients (cases 1, 3, 7, 10, 16 and 17). Abnormalities of both the cell cycle pathway and DNA repair genes occurred in 18% (3/17) of patients (cases 4, 9 and 12) and aberrations in PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway and DNA repair genes were discerned in 12% (2/17) of patients (cases 13 and 15).

Number of genomic aberrations and the distinctness of the profiles (Tables 1 and 2)

There were 30 distinct genes involved with 60 distinct molecular alterations. Genomic twins refer to two or more patients that have alterations in the identical genes. Molecular twins refer to two or more patients that have alterations in the same genes and the specific alterations within the gene are also identical. There were no genomic or molecular twins in this study. Therefore, our analysis showed that each of the 17 Merkel cell carcinomas were distinct at the genomic and at the molecular level.

TP53 suppressor gene aberrations (Tables 1 and 2, Figure 1)

Genomic abnormalities in TP53 were found in 71% (12/17) of patients. However, amongst the 16 molecular aberrations, 15 were distinct; two patients (cases 9 and 17) had the same molecular abnormality: R248W. One tumor (case 13) harbored three distinct molecular TP53 abnormalities and two tumors (cases 16 and 17) harbored two distinct molecular aberrations.

Cyclin pathway aberrations (Tables 1 and 2, Figure 1)

Aberrations in cell cycle genes were observed in 71% (12/17) of patients. The most common aberration was in the RB1 tumor suppressor gene; RB1 was mutated in 10 patients. In one patient (case 9), there were two molecular aberrations in RB1. Genomic alterations in either CDKN2A/B (case 8) or CDKN2C (case 3) were each observed in one patient.

PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway aberrations (Tables 1 and 2, Figure 1)

Genomic abnormalities in the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway were noted in 53% (9/17) of patients. There were 10 molecular abnormalities in these nine patients; one patient (case 13) had an aberration in both PIK3R1 and PTEN. The most common genomic aberration was in PIK3CA [found in three patients (cases 13, 15 and 16)]; two patients had a genomic aberration of the NF1 gene.

DNA repair gene aberrations (Tables 1 and 2, Figure 1)

DNA repair gene abnormalities were observed in 29% (5/17) of patients. They included eight molecular abnormalities. Two patients had genomic aberration of BAP1 (cases 4 and 9); two patients had BRCA1/2 alterations (case 13 had a BRCA1 abnormality and case 4 had a BRCA2 abnormality). In two of the five patients, there were abnormalities in multiple DNA repair genes; either BAP1 and BRCA2 (case 4) or BAP1, FANCA, and MLH1 (case 9). Genomic alterations in either ATM (case 12) or CHEK2 (case 15) were each observed in one patient. Abbreviations: C, case. Many of these therapies have not been validated as effective in patients. Aberration is of uncertain clinical significance and relevance of therapeutic strategies is unknown. Aberration is an inactivating alteration and therapeutic strategies are not expected to be relevant.

Actionable aberrations (Tables 1, 2 and 3)

Of the 30 distinct genomic aberrations, 73% (22/30) were theoretically targetable by either an off-label use of an FDA-approved drug (21/30) or an experimental drug in a clinical trial where an off-label use did not exist (1/30). The vast majority of patients (94%, 16/17) had at least one aberration that was potentially targetable. There were between zero (case 5) and four (cases 4, 9 and 13) actionable genes affected per patient (median, two genes per patient). Potential therapies for the genomic aberrations in each of the 17 patients with Merkel cell carcinoma are summarized in Table 3 [34-72].
Table 3

Potential therapies for genomic aberrations in each of 17 patients with Merkel cell carcinoma [34–72] [a]

CAberrationsExamples of potential cognate targeted therapies
1NF1 L937*NF1 may be targeted with the mTOR inhibitor everolimus [34, 35] and /or the MEK inhibitor trametinib [36]
RB1 Q685*TP53 H179YLonger progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
2RICTOR amplificationRICTOR amplification is targetable by investigational mTORC1/mTORC2 inhibiotrs (such as AZD8055 and MLN0128) [3941]
3CDKN2C lossPIK3R1 Q221*PIK3R1 mutation targeted with mTOR inhibitor everolimus [42, 43]
4BAP1 G422fs*8BAP1 targeted with PARP inhibitor olaparib [4447]
BRCA2 K3326*BRCA2 targeted with PARP inhibitor olaparib [44, 45, 48, 49]
PDGFRB L986F [b]PDGFRB targeted by dovitinib [50] and sorafenib [51]
RB1 Q257*TP53 C275WLonger progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
5ARID1A loss
6MYC amplificationNTRK3 K461R [b]NTRK3 inhibitors in development; also targeted by crizotinib [52, 53]
RB1 Q93*TP53 K120*Longer progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
7AKT2 amplificationAKT2 may be targeted with AKT or mTOR inhibitors [54] or MEK inhibitors [55]
RB1 Q93*TP53 Q331*Longer progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
8CDKN2A/B lossCDKN2A/B loss leads to activation of the CDK4/6 pathway which can be targeted with CDK4/6 inhibitor palbociclib [56]
EGFR E282K [b]EGFR targeted with erlotinib or cetuximab [57]
9BAP1 Q729*BAP1 may theoretically be targeted by olaparib and platinums [4447]
FANCA T1161M [b]FANCA may theoretically be targeted by PARP inhibitors and platinums [4447, 58, 59]
MLH1 E694*MLH1 mutations may be targeted by PARP inhibitors and Top1 inhibitor (irinotecan) [60] or antiPD1 agents [61]
RB1 splice site 1499 – 2A > GRB1 splice site 2489 + 1G > ATP53 R248WLonger progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
10FBXW7 Q95*FBXW7 may be targeted by mTOR inhibitors [62, 63]
NOTCH1 splice site 4586 + 1G > A [c]NOTCH1 is potentially targetable with gamma-secretase inhibitor [64, 65]; this alteration is unlikely to be activating
RB1 splice site 1422–1G > ASMARCA4 R1192C1TP53 R280KLonger progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
11KMT2D truncation, exon 4NOTCH1 splice site 5168–1G > A [c]NOTCH1 is potentially targetable with gamma-secretase inhibitor [64, 65]; this alteration is unlikely to be activating
RB1 A392fs*5TP53 R175HLonger progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
12ATM R2993*NOTCH1 E256* [c]ATM mutation targeted with olaparib [66]NOTCH1 is potentially targetable with gamma-secretase inhibitor [64,65]; this alteration is unlikely to be activating
RB1 S249*TP53 R282WLonger progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
13BRCA1 Q1756*PIK3CA E542KBRCA1 targeted with PARP inhibitor olaparib [48]PIK3CA mutations may be targeted with the mTOR inhibitor everolimus [42, 43]
PTEN splice site 635–1G > APTEN mutations may be targeted with the mTOR inhibitor everolimus [43]
TP53 E339KTP53 G187STP53 R202fs*45Longer progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
14ALK F1174CALK targeted with crizotinib [67]
RET E511KRET targeted with cabozantinib [68]
15CHEK2 R346G [b]PIK3CA R88QCHEK2 may be targeted by olaparib and platinums [4447, 69]PIK3CA mutations may be targeted with the mTOR inhibitor everolimus [42, 43]
TP53 P177LLonger progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
16PIK3CA G1049RPIK3CA mutations may be targeted with the mTOR inhibitor everolimus [42, 43]
PTCH1 P369L [b]PTCH1 mutation targetable with vismodegib [70]
RB1 M386fs*1TP53 R224HTP53 Y220*Longer progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]
17APC W2612*APC may be targeted with sulindac [71, 72]
EPHA5 R417Q [b]
NF1 splice site 5609 + 1G > ANF1 may be targeted with the mTOR inhibitor everolimus [34, 35] and/or the MEK inhibitor trametinib [36]
RB1 W99*TP53 P151STP53 R248WLonger progression free survival with bevacizumab in patient with TP53 mutations [37, 38]

Abbreviations: C, case.

Many of these therapies have not been validated as effective in patients.

Aberration is of uncertain clinical significance and relevance of therapeutic strategies is unknown.

Aberration is an inactivating alteration and therapeutic strategies are not expected to be relevant.

DISCUSSION

Merkel cell carcinoma is an ultra-rare neuroendocrine cancer of the skin that most commonly presents in elderly Caucasian men [5, 73]. The pathogenesis is related not only to ultraviolet light exposure, but also to immunosuppression [5, 73]. In addition, the presence of Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) has been demonstrated in about 45% [73] to 80% [74] of the cases. Gene mutations may have a role in the etiology of Merkel cell carcinoma, particularly in patients whose tumors are Merkel cell polymavirus-negative [75]. A recent study of nine virus-negative patients showed high mutational burden (as compared to that in virus-positive patients), and alterations in TP53, RB1, PIK3CA, HRAS, PRUNE2 and NOTCH (integrative sequencing that included data from whole-exome sequencing and whole-transcriptome sequencing) [13]. Another similar study (N = 619 genes analyzed; 21 virus-negative and 13 virus-positive patients) confirmed high mutation burden and a UV-induced DNA damage signature for virus-negative patients. All viral-negative tumors harbored mutations in RB1, TP53, and a high frequency of mutations in NOTCH1 and FAT1. Additional mutated or amplified cancer genes of potential clinical importance included those in the PI3K or MAPK pathway [14]. Of interest, a subset of virus-negative patients showed high PDL1, suggesting that they might respond to antiPD1 checkpoint inhibitors [15]. The prognosis for patients with Merkel cell carcinoma is poor; more than 33% of patients die from their disease and 50% of patients with advanced tumors live less than 9 months following diagnosis [76]. Of interest in this regard is that exome sequencing of Merkel cell revealed that TP53 was more common in the virus-negative group and predicted a poor survival (5-year survival in TP53 mutant versus wild-type stage I and II disease was 20% vs. 92%, respectively; P = 0.0036) [16]. In general, Merkel cell carcinoma has shown low response rates to chemotherapy [4-6] and to molecularly targeted therapies that are administered without molecular matching [32]. Thus, therapeutic options for Merkel cell carcinoma are limited. In addition, we are not aware of any reports that describe the response in Merkel cell carcinomas when genetic aberrations and therapies were matched. We therefore investigated the genomic landscape of Merkel cell carcinomas by comprehensive genomic profiling and analyzed potential pharmacologic tractability. The most common genetic aberration among 17 patients with Merkel cell carcinoma was TP53 mutation (12/17 [71%]) (Tables 1 and 2, Figure 1). Our current study observed a markedly higher incidence of TP53 mutations than that noted in previous reports that demonstrated TP53 mutations ranging from 0% to 37% [16, 19, 20, 77, 78]. The TP53 gene is large and there are many areas that can be mutated [79]; our study used comprehensive genomic profiling that evaluated all areas of the gene; in contrast, some of the earlier reported results sequenced discrete regions of the TP53 gene and may not have identified all existing mutations. TP53 gene anomalies are generally seen in virus-negative Merkel cell cancers [16], but a limitation of our study is that viral status was not available. Finally, each of the reports of Merkel cell genomics have small numbers of patients, perhaps accounting in part for the variability in percent positive for TP53 mutations.
Table 1

enomic portfolio in each of 17 patients with Merkel cell carcinoma [a]

CAberrationsNo. of genealterations per patient [a]Cell cycle pathwayDNA repair genePI3K/AKT/mTORpathwayPotentially actionable
1NF1 L937*3XYes
RB1 Q685*XNo
TP53 H179YYes
2RICTOR amplification1XYes
3CDKN2C loss2XNot clear
PIK3R1 Q221*XYes
4BAP1 G422fs*85XYes
BRCA2 K3326*XYes
PDGFRB L986F [b]Yes
RB1 Q257*XNo
TP53 C275WYes
5ARID1A loss1No
6MYC amplification4No
NTRK3 K461R [b]Yes
RB1 Q93*XNo
TP53 K120*Yes
7AKT2 amplification3XYes
RB1 Q93*XNo
TP53 Q331*Yes
8CDKN2A/B loss2XYes
EGFR E282K [b]Yes
9BAP1 Q729*5XYes
FANCA T1161M [b]XYes
MLH1 E694*XYes
RB1 splice site 1499 − 2A > GRB1 splice site 2489 + 1G > ATP53 R248WXXNoNoYes
10FBXW7 Q95*5XYes
NOTCH1 splice site 4586 + 1G > A [c]XYes
RB1 splice site 1422 − 1G > ANo
SMARCA4 R1192CNo
TP53 R280KYes
11KMT2D truncation, exon 44Not clear
NOTCH1 splice site 5168 − 1G > A [c]Yes
RB1 A392fs*5XNo
TP53 R175HYes
12ATM R2993*4XYes
NOTCH1 E256* [c]Yes
RB1 S249*XNo
TP53 R282WYes
13BRCA1 Q1756*4XYes
PIK3CA E542KXYes
PTEN splice site 635 − 1G > AXYes
TP53 E339KYes
TP53 G187SYes
TP53 R202fs*45Yes
14ALK F1174CRET E511K2YesYes
15CHEK2 R346G [b]3XYes
PIK3CA R88QXYes
TP53 P177LYes
16PIK3CA G1049R4XYes
PTCH1 P369L [b]Yes
RB1 M386fs*1XNo
TP53 R224HYes
TP53 Y220*Yes
17APC W2612*5Yes
EPHAS R417Q [b]Not clear
NF1 splice site 5609 + 1G > AXYes
RB1 W99*XNo
TP53 P151SYes
TP53 R248WYes

Abbreviations: C, case; No., number.

4 cases had more than one molecular aberration in the same gene: case 9 [RB1 = 2], case 13 [TP53 = 3], case 16[TP53 = 2], and case 17 [TP53 = 2].

Aberration is of uncertain clinical significance and relevance of therapeutic strategies is unknown.

Aberration is an inactivating alteration and therapeutic strategies are not expected to be relevant.

Table 2

Summary of genomic alterations in patients with Merkel cell carcinoma

AberrationNumber of patientsPercent of patientsPotentially actionable [a]
TP531271Yes
RB11059No
NOTCH1318No [b]
PIK3CA318Yes
BAP1212Yes
BRCA1/2212Yes
NF1212Yes
AKT216Yes
ALK16Yes
APC16Yes
ARIDIA16No
ATM16Yes
CDKN2A/B16Yes
CDKN2C16Not clear [c]
CHEK216Yes
EGFR16Yes
EPHAS16Not clear [c]
FANCA16Yes
FBXW716Yes
KMT2D16Not clear [c]
MLH116Yes
MYC16No
NTRK316Yes
PDGFRB16Yes
PIK3R116Yes
PTCH116Yes
PTEN16Yes
RET16Yes
RICTOR16Yes
SMARCA416No

Potentially actionable indicates some evidence in the literature that there are drugs that impact the target. This evidence may derive from clinical observations in other tumors or from preclinical evidence.

Activating NOTCH mutations are potentially actionable but the ones in this series were inactivating.

Not clear indicates mixed or inconclusive literature evidence for the potential of available drugs to impact the altered gene product.

Figure 1

Number of patients with each aberration

TP53 has proven difficult to target. MDM2 inhibitors can theoretically be used in patients with wild-type TP53. Recent data suggest that TP53 mutations result in increased levels of VEGFA, which is the target of bevacizumab [80]. Said et al. showed that bevacizumab-containing regimens were associated with longer progression-free survival when compared to non-bevacizumab-containing regimens in patients with TP53-mutated advanced solid tumors (median 11.0 versus 4.0 months (p < 0.01) [37]. Wee-1 inhibitors, which are in experimental trials, may also target TP53 [81] (Table 3 [34-72]). The cell cycle pathway (CDKN2A/B, CDKN2C or RB1 genes) was also abnormal in 71% of patients (12/17) with Merkel cell carcinomas (Tables 1 and 2, Figure 1). Aberrations in the cyclin D-cyclin-dependent kinase pathway that regulates the cell cycle restriction point is a common feature of human cancer, contributing to tumor proliferation, genomic instability and chromosomal instability [12, 82, 83]. This pathway can be altered through multiple mechanisms including increased signaling through CDK4 and CDK6 amplification, overexpression of cyclin D1, and loss of inhibitors including CDKN2A and/or CDKN2B [84-87]. Regarding therapeutic implications, the cell cycle pathway is possibly targetable with CDK4/6 inhibitors such as palbociclib [56], and further investigation is warranted (Table 3 [34-72]). Mutation or loss of RB1, a tumor suppressor gene, also alters the cell cycle pathway. RB1 gene alterations in Merkel cell cancers are associated with virus-negative disease [88]. Merkel cell polyomavirus large-T antigen binds RB1 with high affinity, suppressing its anti-neoplastic function [89]. Aberration of RB1 renders tumors resistant to CDK4/6 inhibitors such as palbociclib [38]. Ten patients in our series had RB1 mutations (Tables 1 and 2, Figure 1). Importantly, aberrations in the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway (AKT2, FBXW7, NF1, PIK3CA, PIK3R1, PTEN or RICTOR) were also commonly seen in Merkel cell carcinomas (9/17 [53%]) (Tables 1 and 2, Figure 1). PIK3CA is a key regulator of cell motility and chemotaxis. Aberrations in PI3KCA usually occur in tumors that do not have Merkel cell polyomavirus [24, 25]. The PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway can be targeted by PI3K/AKT/mTOR inhibitors such as everolimus and temsirolimus, both of which are FDA-approved mTOR inhibitors [42, 43]. Since Merkel cell carcinomas—regardless of whether they are positive or negative for Merkel cell polyomavirus—show activated PI3K/AKT signaling, PI3K and dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitors may be used as potential targeted therapies, though the literature suggests that for many tumors with pathway activation, they are not effective as single agents [24, 25]. With regards to RICTOR amplification, recent studies have shown that this aberration may be targetable by investigational mTORC1/mTORC2 inhibitors such as AZD8055 and MLN0128 [39-41] (Table 3 [34-72]). Several investigators have also previously shown that MAP (mitogen-activated protein) kinase-related genes—such as KRAS and BRAF—are more frequently aberrant in the presence of mutant PIK3CA, as compared with wild-type PIK3CA [90]. These genes may confer resistance to PI3K/AKT/mTOR inhibitors. Interestingly, none of our patients had KRAS or BRAF alterations. Abnormalities in the DNA repair gene pathway (ATM, BAP1, BRCA1/2, CHEK2, FANCA or MLH1) were also observed in 29% of patients (5/17) (Tables 1 and 2, Figure 1). Drugs such as platinums, PARP inhibitors, and possibly immunotherapeutic agents can target DNA repair gene abnormalities (Table 3 [34-72]). Some of these abnormalities (such as BRCA1/2 or ATM) can be germline; germline testing was not conducted in the patients included in this analysis. Interestingly, 16/17 patients (94%) had potentially actionable aberrations (Table 1). The number of actionable genes affected per patient ranged between zero (case 5) and four (cases 4, 9 and 13), with a median of two per patient. Indeed, the majority of the genomic alterations were theoretically druggable (Tables 1 and 2). Of the 22 (73%) actionable aberrations, 21 were targetable by an FDA-approved drug (off-label) (representing 70% [21/30] of all distinct alterations). An additional one (3% [1/30]) distinct alteration (RICTOR) was targetable by an experimental drug in a clinical trial. As there are no FDA-approved targeted therapies for Merkel cell carcinoma and most conventional chemotherapy has been shown to be associated with poor clinical outcomes: therefore, matched targeted therapies based on molecular profiling merits investigation [91]. Our current study has some limitations. First, it was performed retrospectively with a relatively limited number of patients. Second, molecular analysis was done on archival tumor tissue, which was obtained at different time points in relationship to the clinical history; there was no information regarding the status of the patients, whether the tumors were primary or metastatic, the location of the tumor and the presence or absence of Merkel cell polyomavirus, or cytokeratin-20 positivity (found in most, but not all, Merkel cell cancers) [95]. However, despite these limitations, the genomic characterization of Merkel cell carcinomas has uncovered interesting and possibly clinically relevant results. In summary, our 17 patients with Merkel cell carcinomas harbored 30 genomic alterations (median = 4 per patient) of which 60 were distinct molecular aberrations. The most common genomic aberrations in patients with Merkel cell carcinoma were in the TP53 gene and the cell cycle pathway (CDKN2A/B, CDKN2C or RB1), followed by the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway (AKT2, FBXW7, NF1, PIK3CA, PIK3R1, PTEN or RICTOR) and DNA repair genes (ATM, BAP1, BRCA1/2, CHEK2, FANCA or MLH1). The vast majority of patients (94%) had at least one aberration that was potentially pharmacologically tractable by an FDA-approved drug or an investigational agent in a clinical trial. Indeed, of the 30 distinct genomic aberrations, 22 (73%) were potentially actionable. These observations suggest that matching patients with appropriately targeted agents is feasible and warrants study. Finally, no two patients had an identical molecular portfolio. This result is similar to that reported in metastatic breast cancer, where 131 distinct aberrations in 57 patients with no two patients having the same molecular portfolio were recently described [92-94]. Taken together, these observations suggest that customized targeted combination therapy merits investigation in patients with Merkel cell carcinoma.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Patients

We investigated the genomic alterations of patients with Merkel cell carcinoma referred to Foundation Medicine (Cambridge, MA) for next-generation sequencing (December 2011 to April 2014 (N = 17)). Here, we report the prevalence and frequencies of these aberrations. This study was performed in accordance with University of California San Diego IRB guidelines for a de-identified database.

Tissue samples and mutational analysis

Available tissues from diagnostic and therapeutic procedures were used to assess molecular aberrations. Samples from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue were sent for targeted next-generation sequencing at Foundation Medicine (Cambridge, MA). The test sequences the entire coding sequence of 182, or more recently 236, cancer-related genes plus 47 introns from 19 genes often rearranged or altered in cancer to an average depth-of-coverage of greater than 250X (http://foundationone.com/docs/FoundationOne_tech-info-and-overview.pdf). This method of sequencing allows for detection of copy number alterations, gene rearrangements, and somatic mutations with 99% specificity and > 99% sensitivity for base substitutions at > five mutant allele frequency and > 95% sensitivity for copy number alterations. Foundation Medicine uses a threshold of > eight copies for gene amplification. The submitting physicians provided a diagnosis of the tumor. Next-generation sequencing data were collected and interpreted by N-of-One, Inc. (Lexington, MA; www.n-of-one.com). For the purpose of our analysis, “cell cycle pathway” aberrations included CDKN2A/B, CDKN2C or RB1 alterations. Similarly, “phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT/mTOR pathway” aberrations included alterations of AKT2, FBXW7, NF1, PIK3CA, PIK3R1, PTEN or RICTOR. “DNA repair gene” abnormalities included alterations in ATM, BAP1, BRCA1/2, CHEK2, FANCA or MLH1. We have evaluated whether certain genomic alterations were actionable or not based on the availability of a drug that is approved or in clinical trials that targets that aberration with low 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) or an antibody that primarily targets that abnormality.
  92 in total

1.  Influence of MLH1 on colon cancer sensitivity to poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor combined with irinotecan.

Authors:  Lucio Tentori; Carlo Leonetti; Alessia Muzi; Annalisa Susanna Dorio; Manuela Porru; Susanna Dolci; Federica Campolo; Patrizia Vernole; Pedro Miguel Lacal; Françoise Praz; Grazia Graziani
Journal:  Int J Oncol       Date:  2013-05-08       Impact factor: 5.650

2.  Emerging and mechanism-based therapies for recurrent or metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Natalie J Miller; Shailender Bhatia; Upendra Parvathaneni; Jayasri G Iyer; Paul Nghiem
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Oncol       Date:  2013-06

Review 3.  Merkel cell carcinoma: current status of targeted and future potential for immunotherapies.

Authors:  Bishr Aldabagh; Jayne Joo; Siegrid S Yu
Journal:  Semin Cutan Med Surg       Date:  2014-06

Review 4.  Endocrine tumours in neurofibromatosis type 1, tuberous sclerosis and related syndromes.

Authors:  Maya B Lodish; Constantine A Stratakis
Journal:  Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2010-06       Impact factor: 4.690

5.  Clinical characteristics of Merkel cell carcinoma at diagnosis in 195 patients: the AEIOU features.

Authors:  Michelle Heath; Natalia Jaimes; Bianca Lemos; Arash Mostaghimi; Linda C Wang; Pablo F Peñas; Paul Nghiem
Journal:  J Am Acad Dermatol       Date:  2008-03       Impact factor: 11.527

Review 6.  Milestones in the staging, classification, and biology of Merkel cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Ata S Moshiri; Paul Nghiem
Journal:  J Natl Compr Canc Netw       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 11.908

7.  Merkel Cell Carcinoma with a Suppressor of Fused (SUFU) Mutation: Case Report and Potential Therapeutic Implications.

Authors:  Philip R Cohen; Razelle Kurzrock
Journal:  Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)       Date:  2015-04-15

Review 8.  Mutational analysis of merkel cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Derek J Erstad; James C Cusack
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2014-10-17       Impact factor: 6.639

9.  DNA damage response factors from diverse pathways, including DNA crosslink repair, mediate alternative end joining.

Authors:  Sean M Howard; Diana A Yanez; Jeremy M Stark
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2015-01-28       Impact factor: 5.917

10.  Inhibition of the NOTCH pathway using γ-secretase inhibitor RO4929097 has limited antitumor activity in established glial tumors.

Authors:  Carmela Dantas-Barbosa; Guillaume Bergthold; Estelle Daudigeos-Dubus; Heike Blockus; John F Boylan; Celine Ferreira; Stephanie Puget; Michel Abely; Gilles Vassal; Jacques Grill; Birgit Geoerger
Journal:  Anticancer Drugs       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 2.248

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  13 in total

1.  MGMT promoter methylation status in Merkel cell carcinoma: in vitro versus invivo.

Authors:  Giuseppina Improta; Cathrin Ritter; Angela Pettinato; Valeria Vasta; David Schrama; Filippo Fraggetta; Jürgen C Becker
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2017-04-12       Impact factor: 4.553

2.  EPB41L5 is Associated With the Metastatic Potential of Low-grade Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors.

Authors:  James Saller; Shabnam Seydafkan; Mohammad Shahid; Manoj Gadara; Mauro Cives; Steven A Eschrich; David Boulware; Jonathan R Strosberg; Nasir Aejaz; Domenico Coppola
Journal:  Cancer Genomics Proteomics       Date:  2019 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 4.069

Review 3.  Epidemiology, biology and therapy of Merkel cell carcinoma: conclusions from the EU project IMMOMEC.

Authors:  Jürgen C Becker; Andreas Stang; Axel Zur Hausen; Nicole Fischer; James A DeCaprio; Richard W Tothill; Rikke Lyngaa; Ulla Kring Hansen; Cathrin Ritter; Paul Nghiem; Christopher K Bichakjian; Selma Ugurel; David Schrama
Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother       Date:  2017-11-30       Impact factor: 6.968

4.  Tumor Mutational Burden as an Independent Predictor of Response to Immunotherapy in Diverse Cancers.

Authors:  Aaron M Goodman; Shumei Kato; Lyudmila Bazhenova; Sandip P Patel; Garrett M Frampton; Vincent Miller; Philip J Stephens; Gregory A Daniels; Razelle Kurzrock
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2017-08-23       Impact factor: 6.261

5.  Poly ADP-ribose polymerase-1 as a potential therapeutic target in Merkel cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Renata Ferrarotto; Robert Cardnell; Shirley Su; Lixia Diao; A Karina Eterovic; Victor Prieto; William H Morrisson; Jing Wang; Merrill S Kies; Bonnie S Glisson; Lauren Averett Byers; Diana Bell
Journal:  Head Neck       Date:  2018-03-23       Impact factor: 3.147

Review 6.  Treatment of Advanced Merkel Cell Carcinoma: Current Therapeutic Options and Novel Immunotherapy Approaches.

Authors:  Daniela Femia; Natalie Prinzi; Andrea Anichini; Roberta Mortarini; Federico Nichetti; Francesca Corti; Martina Torchio; Giorgia Peverelli; Filippo Pagani; Andrea Maurichi; Ilaria Mattavelli; Massimo Milione; Nice Bedini; Ambra Corti; Maria Di Bartolomeo; Filippo de Braud; Sara Pusceddu
Journal:  Target Oncol       Date:  2018-10       Impact factor: 4.493

Review 7.  Merkel cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Jürgen C Becker; Andreas Stang; James A DeCaprio; Lorenzo Cerroni; Celeste Lebbé; Michael Veness; Paul Nghiem
Journal:  Nat Rev Dis Primers       Date:  2017-10-26       Impact factor: 52.329

8.  Mutational Landscape of Virus- and UV-Associated Merkel Cell Carcinoma Cell Lines Is Comparable to Tumor Tissue.

Authors:  Kai Horny; Patricia Gerhardt; Angela Hebel-Cherouny; Corinna Wülbeck; Jochen Utikal; Jürgen C Becker
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2021-02-05       Impact factor: 6.639

9.  Merkel Cell Polyomavirus Exhibits Dominant Control of the Tumor Genome and Transcriptome in Virus-Associated Merkel Cell Carcinoma.

Authors:  Gabriel J Starrett; Christina Marcelus; Paul G Cantalupo; Joshua P Katz; Jingwei Cheng; Keiko Akagi; Manisha Thakuria; Guilherme Rabinowits; Linda C Wang; David E Symer; James M Pipas; Reuben S Harris; James A DeCaprio
Journal:  MBio       Date:  2017-01-03       Impact factor: 7.867

Review 10.  Merkel Cell Carcinoma from Molecular Pathology to Novel Therapies.

Authors:  Karolina Stachyra; Monika Dudzisz-Śledź; Elżbieta Bylina; Anna Szumera-Ciećkiewicz; Mateusz J Spałek; Ewa Bartnik; Piotr Rutkowski; Anna M Czarnecka
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-06-11       Impact factor: 5.923

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