| Literature DB >> 29152076 |
Patricia Adamo1, Caroline M Cowley1, Christopher P Neal2, Vilas Mistry1, Karen Page1, Ashley R Dennison2, John Isherwood2, Robert Hastings3, JinLi Luo3, David A Moore1, Pringle J Howard1, Martins L Miguel4, Catrin Pritchard1, Margaret Manson1, Jacqui A Shaw1.
Abstract
The majority of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas (PDAC) are diagnosed late so that surgery is rarely curative. Earlier detection could significantly increase the likelihood of successful treatment and improve survival. The aim of the study was to provide proof of principle that point mutations in key cancer genes can be identified by sequencing circulating free DNA (cfDNA) and that this could be used to detect early PDACs and potentially, premalignant lesions, to help target early effective treatment. Targeted next generation sequencing (tNGS) analysis of mutation hotspots in 50 cancer genes was conducted in 26 patients with PDAC, 14 patients with chronic pancreatitis (CP) and 12 healthy controls with KRAS status validated by digital droplet PCR. A higher median level of total cfDNA was observed in patients with PDAC (585 ng/ml) compared to either patients with CP (300 ng/ml) or healthy controls (175 ng/ml). PDAC tissue showed wide mutational heterogeneity, whereas KRAS was the most commonly mutated gene in cfDNA of patients with PDAC and was significantly associated with a poor disease specific survival (p=0.018). This study demonstrates that tNGS of cfDNA is feasible to characterise the circulating genomic profile in PDAC and that driver mutations in KRAS have prognostic value but cannot currently be used to detect early emergence of disease. Importantly, monitoring total cfDNA levels may have utility in individuals "at risk" and warrants further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: KRAS; cfDNA; ctDNA; liquid biopsy; pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas
Year: 2017 PMID: 29152076 PMCID: PMC5675628 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.20250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Validation of the Cancer Hotspot Panel v2 by detecting hotspot mutations in four commonly mutated genes
| Gene mutation; amino acid (Variant Allele Frequency) | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell line | KRAS | TP53 | SMAD4 | CDKN2A | ||||||||
| 10 ng | 5 ng | 1 ng | 10 ng | 5 ng | 1 ng | 10 ng | 5 ng | 1 ng | 10 ng | 5 ng | 1 ng | |
| Wild Type | c.659A>G; Y220C (100%) | c.659A>G; Y220C (100%) | c.659A>G; Y220C (100%) | Homozygous deletion | Homozygous deletion | |||||||
| c.35G>A; p.G12D (70.5%) | c.35G>A; p.G12D (70.2%) | c.35G>A; p.G12D (72.2%) | c.818G>A; R273H (100%) | c.818G>A; R273H (100%) | c.818G>A; R273H (100%) | Wild Type | Homozygous deletion | |||||
| c.34G>T; p.G12C (100%) | c.34G>T; p.G12C (100%) | c.34G>T; p.G12C (100%) | c.742C>T; R248W (100%) | c.742C>T; R248W (100%) | c.742C>T; R248W (100%) | Wild Type | Homozygous deletion | |||||
Allele frequency shown in brackets where appropriate.
Clinicopathological characteristics of cfDNA patients
| Healthy Volunteers N (%) | Chronic Pancreatitis N (%) | PDAC N (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12 | 14 | 26 | |
| Median | 175 | 300 | 585 |
| Range | 100-340 | 130-1000 | 120-4180 |
| Median | 55 | 56 | 69 |
| Range | 40-83 | 19-71 | 40-84 |
| Male | 2 (17) | 10 (72) | 16 (62) |
| Female | 10 (83) | 3 (21) | 10 (38) |
| Unknown | 0 (0) | 1 (7) | 0 (0) |
| Caucasian | na | na | 25 (96) |
| Other | 1 (4) | ||
| I/II | - | - | 7 (27) |
| III | - | - | 2 (8) |
| IV | - | - | 16 (61) |
| Unknown | - | - | 1 (4) |
| Head | - | - | 19 (73) |
| Body, Tail, Neck | - | - | 6 (23) |
| Unknown | - | - | 1 (4) |
| ≤ 37 | - | - | 3 (11) |
| > 37 | - | - | 15 (58) |
| Not Tested | - | - | 8 (31) |
| Median | na | 1482 | 148 |
| Range | 101-1579 | 17-1460 | |
| Alive | na | 11 (79) | 1 (4) |
| Cancer death | 0 (0) | 25 (96) | |
| Non Cancer death | 3 (21) | 0 (0) |
na; data not available, -; not applicable to patient cohort.
Figure 1Stem and Leaf plot demonstrating the differences in cfDNA levels between healthy controls, CP and PDAC patients
A significantly higher expression was noted in CP patients compared to healthy controls and in PDAC patients compared to healthy controls but not between CP patients and PDAC. * p<0.05, ** p<0.001.
Summary of the mutations identified in the cfDNA of PDAC patients by tNGS
| Patient ID | cfDNA (ng/ml) | Gene | Mutation | Variant Allele Frequency (%) | Coverage | COSMIC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 63 | 540 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 606 | -- | |
| 69 | 800 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 482 | -- | |
| 72 | 250 | KRAS | WT | -- | 507 | -- | |
| 92 | 220 | KRAS | WT | -- | 980 | -- | |
| 102 | 840 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 1448 | -- | |
| 104 | 450 | ||||||
| 16 | 232 | KRAS | WT | -- | 853 | -- | |
| 19 | 300 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 2040 | -- | |
| 34 | 1190 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 1257 | -- | |
| 76** | 354 | KRAS | WT | na | na | na | |
| 80 | 610 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 464 | - | |
| 12 | 120 | KRAS | WT | -- | 431 | -- | |
| 13 | 270 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 456 | -- | |
| 14 | 710 | ||||||
| 15 | 700 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 2000 | -- | |
| 18 | 700 | ||||||
| 21 | 2790 | ||||||
| 24 | 300 | KRAS | WT | -- | 1155 | -- | |
| 26 | 4180 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 330 | -- | |
| 27 | 2620 | ||||||
| 31 | 430 | ||||||
| SMAD4 | p.P356R | 13.0 | 1642 | COSM339351 | |||
| TP53 | p.R248Q | 17.4 | 3857 | COSM10662 | |||
| 41 | 1150 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 388 | -- | |
| 53 | 970 | ||||||
| 68 | 280 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 1338 | -- | |
| 73 | 710 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 930 | -- | |
| 91 | 560 | KRAS* | WT | -- | 597 | -- |
--; not relevant as wild type, *; validated by ddPCR, **; identified by ddPCR validation, na; data not available.
Association of KRAS in the cfDNA of PDAC patients with clinicopathological criteria
| Variable | KRAS | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| NoN (%) | YesN (%) | ||
| 19 | 7 | ||
| Head | 17 (90) | 2 (29) | |
| Body, Tail, Neck | 2 (10) | 4 (57) | |
| Unknown | 0 (0) | 1 (14) | |
| No | 9 (47) | 1 (14) | 0.190 |
| Yes | 10 (53) | 6 (86) | |
| I/II | 7 (37) | 0 (0) | 0.109 |
| III | 2 (10) | 0 (0) | |
| IV | 10 (53) | 6 (86) | |
| Unknown | 0 (0) | 1 (14) | |
| ≤ 37 | 2 (10) | 1 (14) | 1.000 |
| > 37 | 11 (58) | 4 (57) | |
| Unknown | 6 (32) | 2 (29) | |
Figure 2Kaplan Meier survival curve demonstrating KRAS mutation (dotted line) significantly associates with a poorer disease specific survival vs KRAS wild type (solid line) when detected in cfDNA of PDAC patients (p=0. 018)
Log rank analysis of KRAS mutation status in the cfDNA of PDAC patients and relevant clinicopathological criteria with disease specific survival
| Variable | Disease Specific Survival | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N (%) | Median Survival (days) | X2 value | Hazard Ratio | 95% Confidence Interval | ||
| 26 | 148 | |||||
| WT | 19 (73) | 197 | 5.589 | 2.889 | 1.2 - 7.3 | |
| Mutant | 7 (27) | 60 | ||||
| No | 10 (39) | 255 | 7.007 | 3.399 | 1.3 - 8.9 | |
| Yes | 16 (61) | 111 | ||||
| Head | 19 (73) | 199 | 12.592 | 11.266 | 3.1 - 41.6 | |
| Body, Tail, Neck | 6 (23) | 35 | ||||
| Unknown | 1 (4) | 60 | ||||
| I/II | 7 (27) | 257 | 6.980 | 1.995 | 1.1 - 3.5 | |
| III | 2 (8) | 421 | ||||
| IV | 16 (61) | 111 | ||||
| Unknown | 1 (4) | 60 | ||||
| ≤ 37 | 3 (11) | 455 | 0.261 | 0.620 | 1.385 | 0.4 - 5.0 |
| > 37 | 15 (58) | 140 | ||||
| Unknown | 8 (31) | 145 | ||||
| Male | 16 (61) | 195 | 0.044 | 0.833 | 1.092 | 0.5 - 2.5 |
| Female | 10 (39) | 117 | ||||
| < 65 | 7 (27) | 139 | 0.200 | 0.655 | 0.818 | 0.3 - 2.0 |
| ≥ 65 | 19 (73) | 192 | ||||