| Literature DB >> 30237583 |
Gloria Ravegnini1, Milena Urbini2, Vittorio Simeon3, Chiara Genovese2, Annalisa Astolfi2, Margherita Nannini4, Lidia Gatto4, Maristella Saponara4, Manuela Ianni2, Valentina Indio2, Giovanni Brandi4, Stefania Trino5, Patrizia Hrelia1, Guido Biasco2,3,4, Sabrina Angelini6, Maria A Pantaleo7,8.
Abstract
Imatinib represents the standard therapy for gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) patients with metastatic/unresectable disease. Despite the excellent results achieved with its introduction, the majority of patients quite invariably experience disease progression. The aim of this study was to understand the contribution of germline DNA polymorphisms in discriminating between imatinib clinical response [evaluated as progression free survival (PFS)] and toxicity. In particular, a discovery cohort (34 GIST with a KIT exon 11 primary mutation, and no toxicity) was analyzed through DMET array that interrogates 1936 variants in 231 genes of the ADME process. We further confirmed the genotype of selected variants in an extended cohort of 49 patients (the original cohort and 15 new cases, all with exon 11 primary mutation), identifying 6 SNPs- ABCB4 rs1202283, ABCC2 rs2273697, ABCG1 rs1541290, CYP11B1 rs7003319, CYP7B1 rs6987861, and NQO1 rs10517-significantly associated with response to imatinib. Three SNPs, ABCB4 rs1202283, ABCC2 rs2273697, and NQO1 rs10517, which had a significant association after adjusted multivariate analysis, were included in a genetic prediction model. We confirmed that these SNPs could stratify the cohort of 49 patients according to the risk of developing progression under imatinib treatment. In conclusion, we identified a genetic signature of response to imatinib therapy in GIST patients able to stratify patients at low and high risk to progress, according to their genotype.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30237583 DOI: 10.1038/s41397-018-0050-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacogenomics J ISSN: 1470-269X Impact factor: 3.550