Literature DB >> 31738428

Identifying patients with NTRK fusion cancer.

J P Solomon1, R Benayed1, J F Hechtman1, M Ladanyi1,2.   

Abstract

Due to the efficacy of tropomyosin receptor kinase (TRK) inhibitor therapy and the recent Food and Drug Administration approval of larotrectinib, it is now clinically important to accurately and efficiently identify patients with neurotrophic TRK (NTRK) fusion-driven cancer. These oncogenic fusions occur when the kinase domain of NTRK1, NTRK2 or NTRK3 fuse with any of a number of N-terminal partners. NTRK fusions are characteristic of a few rare types of cancer, such as secretory carcinoma of the breast or salivary gland and infantile fibrosarcoma, but they are also infrequently seen in some common cancers, such as melanoma, glioma and carcinomas of the thyroid, lung and colon. There are multiple methods for identifying NTRK fusions, including pan-TRK immunohistochemistry, fluorescence in situ hybridisation and sequencing methods, and the advantages and drawbacks of each are reviewed here. While testing algorithms will obviously depend on availability of various testing modalities and economic considerations for each individual laboratory, we propose triaging specimens based on histology and other molecular findings to most efficiently identify tumours harbouring these treatable oncogenic fusions.
© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990 NTRK fusions; ancillary testing; next-generation sequencing; tyrosine kinase inhibitor

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31738428      PMCID: PMC6859817          DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdz384

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Oncol        ISSN: 0923-7534            Impact factor:   32.976


Key messages

NTRK fusions are seen in a few rare cancer types and occur infrequently in some common cancers. Accurate identification of NTRK fusion-driven cancer is clinically important and may be achieved using multiple methods. We propose triaging specimens for NTRK fusion testing based on histology and other molecular findings to most efficiently identify patients with these treatable oncogenic fusions.

Oncogenic neurotrophic tropomyosin receptor kinase fusions

The neurotrophic tropomyosin receptor kinases are a family of transmembrane tyrosine kinases that are important players in neural development. The three members of the family, TRKA (NTRK1), TRKB (NTRK2) and TRKC (NTRK3), are encoded by the NTRK1, NTRK2 and NTRK3 genes, respectively, and each consists of an extracellular ligand-binding domain, a transmembrane region and an intracellular kinase domain [1]. Normally, physiological activation of the receptor through ligand binding activates the kinase domain, leading to receptor homodimerisation, phosphorylation and activation of downstream signalling pathways [2]. Although highly homologous, each receptor has a preferred ligand: TRKA has the highest affinity for neurotrophin nerve growth factor, TRKB has the highest affinity for brain-derived neurotrophic factor and neurotrophin-4 and TRKC has the highest affinity for neurotrophin-3 [1−5]. A number of splice variants have been characterised, particularly involving NTRK1, and these variants have been observed both in normal tissues and in human cancers such as neuroblastoma and acute myeloid leukaemia where it is thought that they may play a role in tumourigenesis [1, 2]. While some studies have identified somatic point mutations or amplification in the NTRK genes, such alterations have so far not been shown to be a driver of oncogenesis [2]. Constitutive activation of the tropomyosin receptor kinase (TRK) receptors and subsequent downstream pathways can occur through chromosomal inversions, deletions or translocations that result in an in-frame fusion of the C-terminal tyrosine kinase domain of any of the NTRK genes with an N-terminal fusion partner. A multitude of 5′ fusion partners have been described, and in virtually all cases, the fusion eliminates the ligand binding site, resulting in ligand-independent dimerisation and phosphorylation [2]. The first TRK fusion protein was originally described in a colorectal adenocarcinoma cell line, but even at the time of discovery, it was recognised that involvement of this particular oncogene in such a fusion was an uncommon event in colon cancer [6]. It was later discovered that infantile fibrosarcoma was characterised by an ETV6-NTRK3 fusion involving a translocation of chromosomes 12 and 15 [7, 8], and this same fusion was subsequently also reported in secretory carcinoma of the breast and salivary gland, which now defines these subsets of carcinomas [9, 10]. NTRK fusions have also been reported in a subset of carcinomas of the thyroid, especially in patients with a history of exposure to radiation [11], and they are also rarely found in many other tumours, including carcinomas of the lung [12] and colon [13], gliomas [14, 15], other sarcomas [16], inflammatory myofibroblastic tumours [17] and melanocytic tumours [18, 19]. In recent years, clinical trials have shifted away from site-of-origin and histological subtype-specific designs and more towards basket trials, which are designed to test therapies targeted towards specific molecular mechanisms [20], and trials targeting NTRK fusions have been particularly successful. In one such recent trial, pan class="Chemical">larotrectinib showed remarkable and durable efficacy against locally advanced and metastatic pan class="Disease">solid tumours harbouring an NTRK fusion [21]. Entrectinib, active against NTRK fusions as well as fusions involving ROS1 and ALK, has also shown great efficacy in recent clinical trials [22, 23]. The success of larotrectinib has resulted in its subsequent fast-track approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA),* and therefore standard of care will now require accurate identification of patients who could benefit from this practice-changing therapy.

Methods for detection

Immunohistochemistry

Immunohistochemistry to examine protein expression has several advantages. It is commonly used in clinical labs and is therefore relatively straightforward to implement and validate. It also has the benefits of being inexpensive, requiring only a single unstained slide and having a rapid turnaround time. The clone that is most often used and well-studied is clone EPR17341 (Abcam and Roche/Ventana), which reacts with a conserved proprietary peptide from the C-terminus of TRKA, TRKB and TRKC, and is therefore reactive with any of the oncogenic NTRK fusions. Positive staining has been defined as staining above background in at least 1% of tumour cells [24]. Initial studies have shown sensitivity ranging from 75% to 96.7% and specificity ranging from 92% to 100% [24−27]. However, the staining intensity has been shown to be variable, and staining pattern correlates with fusion partner (Figure 1) [25]. The fusion partner can direct the fusion protein to localise to other cellular compartments, in contrast to the membrane-associated expression of native TRK. One caveat is that recent studies have shown reduced sensitivity for NTRK3 fusions [24]. In our experience, e.g. we have found that sensitivity for NTRK1 and NTRK2 fusions was 96% and 100%, respectively, while sensitivity for NTRK3 fusions was 79% [28]. In addition, immunohistochemistry seems to have variable specificity according to tumour type. While the antibody appears to have 100% specificity in carcinomas of the colon, lung, thyroid, pancreas and biliary tract, decreased specificity is seen in breast and salivary gland carcinomas, as cytoplasmic staining can occasionally be seen. Specificity is lower in sarcomas, particularly those with neural or smooth muscle differentiation as wild-type TRK protein is physiologically expressed in neural and smooth muscle tissue [27, 28].
Figure 1.

Patterns of immunohistochemical staining in NTRK fusion-positive tumours. (A) Secretory carcinoma of the salivary gland with an ETV6-NTRK3 fusion shows weak to moderate nuclear and cytoplasmic staining. (B) Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma with a PLEKHA6-NTRK1 fusion shows prominent membranous staining. (C) Gallbladder adenocarcinoma with an LMNA-NTRK1 fusion shows strong cytoplasmic and perinuclear staining. (D) Metastatic thyroid carcinoma to soft tissue with a TPM3-NTRK1 fusion shows strong cytoplasmic and membranous staining.

Patterns of immunohistochemical staining in NTRK fusion-positive tumours. (A) Secretory carcinoma of the salivary gland with an ETV6-NTRK3 fusion shows weak to moderate nuclear and cytoplasmic staining. (B) Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma with a PLEKHA6-NTRK1 fusion shows prominent membranous staining. (C) Gallbladder adenocarcinoma with an LMNA-NTRK1 fusion shows strong cytoplasmic and perinuclear staining. (D) Metastatic thyroid carcinoma to soft tissue with a TPM3-NTRK1 fusion shows strong cytoplasmic and membranous staining.

Fluorescence in situ hybridisation

Fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) can detect large structural variants at the DNA level and is often used in the clinical laboratory to detect oncogenic fusions in solid tumours. A commercial break-apart probe is available for the ETV6 gene (Abbott, Chicago, IL) where separation of a green signal at the centromeric 3′ end of ETV6 and an orange signal at the 5′ end of ETV6 indicates a structural variant involving the gene. In cases that are histologically suggestive of ETV6-NTRK3 fusions, such as infantile fibrosarcoma, congenital mesoblastic nephroma or secretory carcinoma of the salivary gland or breast, such testing can be useful to confirm the translocation [29]. Since fusions in other cancers can involve any of the NTRK genes and any of a number of partners through either balanced or unbalanced translocation or large deletions, only examining the ETV6 gene would miss many oncogenic NTRK fusions. To this end, break-apart probes for the three NTRK genes have been used to identify fusions and are commercially available from multiple sources [16, 30–32]. Theoretically, break-apart probes have adequate sensitivity and specificity for chromosomal abnormalities, but there are practical technical considerations in the interpretation of break-apart FISH assays. In one study, short inversions and intrachromosomal translocations involving ALK resulted in a short split length using a break-apart probe. These short split lengths were difficult to distinguish from those seen in some normal cells, and therefore can result in false-negative results [33]. These findings would have particular relevance for NTRK1 fusions, a majority of which are intrachromosomal events involving chromosome 1 [34]. For example, LMNA-NTRK1 fusions are formed through an intrachromosomal deletion, which can result in a false-negative FISH due to insufficient splitting of the signals. In addition, while a positive result with a break-apart probe shows the presence of a structural variant involving the probed gene, whether the abnormality results in a functional transcribed fusion cannot be determined. Advantages of FISH include that the amount of material required is only a few unstained slides—usually one unstained slide per probe examined—and the turnaround time is usually only a few days.

Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction

Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) can be used to detect the presence of transcribed RNA, and it can be used either qualitatively or quantitatively to detect the presence of a single oncogenic fusion for which both fusion partners are known. For NTRK fusions, however, because of the number of different fusion partners and breakpoints involved, the utility of RT-PCR for individual fusion transcripts is limited and has been used in the past mainly to detect canonical pan class="Gene">ETV6-NTRK3 fusions. Even though this method may prove difficult to obtain direct evidence of a fusion, RT-PCR could be used to examine differences in expression of the 5′ versus the 3′ ends of a gene, as this has been shown to be associated with the presence of a translocation [35, 36]. For NTRK, which is not expressed in most normal tissues, the 3′ kinase domain would be transcribed at a much higher level than the 5′ extracellular domain in pan class="Disease">tumour tissue that harbours an NTRK fusion. Such an assay could thereby provide indirect evidence of an NTRK fusion.

DNA-based next-generation sequencing

In DNA-based next-generation sequencing (NGS), pan class="Disease">tumour DNA is extracted from pan class="Chemical">formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue and then sequenced to investigate whether specific alterations are present in the tumour. Although there are a number of different library preparation and sequencing solutions available, there are two main approaches to isolating the genes of interest for sequencing. Amplicon-based methods use PCR primers to amplify the areas of interest, and while this method is suitable for detecting point mutations and small indels in a small panel of genes, the detection of gene fusions, which usually involve intronic breakpoints, is limited. Targeted hybridisation capture-based NGS assays on the other hand use capture probes that hybridise to the areas of interest in the genome. This non-biased approach enables deep sequencing of exons of key cancer-related genes for the detection of single point mutations, indels and copy number variations. In addition, the introns of specific genes known to be involved in functional gene fusions can be tiled with probes (baits) to detect these rearrangements [25, 37]. It should be noted, however, that some introns, such as those in NTRK3, are extremely long (spanning 193 KB) and would not be feasible to cover. If covered, those introns would constitute a large percentage of the panel size resulting in coverage reduction of other exonic regions and the overall assay sensitivity. Furthermore, some of these intronic regions cannot be effectively captured even if desired because they contain repetitive elements which cannot be tiled with unique capture probes and therefore cannot yield reads that can be reliably mapped back to that intron (poor mapping quality). Therefore, sensitivity of DNA-based NGS suffers if fusion breakpoints involve long intronic regions that cannot be covered by hybridisation-capture probes. For example, MSK-IMPACT, the DNA-based NGS assay used at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, interrogates introns 3 and 7 through 12 in NTRK1, intron 15 in NTRK2 and introns 4 and 5 in ETV6, the most common NTRK3 fusion partner. However, because of the aforementioned issues involving coverage of the NTRK3 introns, fusions involving NTRK3 other than ETV6, are not covered by the assay [25, 28, 37]. These considerations are not limited to MSK-IMPACT, as other widely used cancer gene panels such as FoundationOne CDx also only assess these same intronic regions [38]. One drawback to DNA-based NGS is that when novel structural variants are detected, it can be difficult to determine whether such an event results in a functional expressed fusion. In these cases, ancillary testing with an orthogonal method, such as RNA-based NGS can be carried out. Other drawbacks include turnaround time, which is significantly longer than immunohistochemistry or FISH, and that more material is required for testing. On the other hand, a major advantage of DNA-based NGS testing is that many genomic events can be interrogated, allowing for simultaneous direct assessment of point mutations, indels, copy number variants and tumour mutation burden in addition to DNA-level gene fusions. Information gained from using this method includes MAPK driver status, which can be used to triage any follow-up testing (see Testing algorithm considerations section). Finally, this method is also effective for monitoring patients with NTRK fusions for development of resistance mutations. Recent studies have observed p.G667C and p.G595R mutations in NTRK1 and p.G696A mutations in NTRK3 that confer resistance to TRK inhibitor therapy [21, 39]. Using DNA-based NGS to monitor for tumour evolution is therefore useful in patients with NTRK fusion-positive cancers treated with TRK inhibitor therapy.

RNA-based NGS

RNA-based sequencing presents several advantages over DNA. The introns are spliced out in the RNA, which removes the technical limitations of intronic coverage. In addition, detection of RNA-level fusions provides direct evidence that they are functionally transcribed, and analysis of the spliced sequence can determine whether the protein would be translated and in-frame. Fusion transcripts can also be detected with high confidence in the RNA of pan class="Disease">low tumour purity samples because gene fusions are often highly expressed in the tissue. Detection of the fusion transcript by RNA-based NGS can be carried out using a few different enrichment methods. In all technologies, the RNA library is first converted to cDNA through reverse transcription. Then, for amplicon-based panels, PCR is used to amplify the sequences of interest. In assays that use standard multiplex PCR, both the driver gene and the fusion partner must be known and the two gene-specific PCR primers must be present in the assay for amplification to occur. In one study that used such a multiplexed amplicon approach using a panel of primer pairs for 169 gene fusions between 19 target genes and 94 fusion partners, sensitivity for fusion detection was determined to be 86% [40, 41]. However, when incorporating the read count information to determine 5′/3′ ratios, as described above for RT-PCR, sensitivity was increased to 100% [40]. A more sensitive and specific targeted amplicon-based method for fusion gene detection is pan class="Disease">anchored multiplex PCR that is commercially available through ArcherDX. In this technology, an Illumina sequencing adaptor is ligated to both ends of the cDNA. In the PCR steps, a gene-specific primer hybridises to the gene of interest, while a universal primer hybridises to the ligated adaptor sequence. Since fusion breakpoints are usually within introns, the gene-specific primers are often complementary to regions at the ends of exons such that the PCR products span exon boundaries. By using this method of sequencing, only one fusion partner needs to be targeted, and therefore novel fusion partners can be characterised [42, 43]. In our laboratory at Memorial Sloan Kettering, we have shown that this technology is able to sensitively and specifically identify fusion transcripts and alternative transcripts resulting from splicing alterations [43, 44]. Capture-based approaches for either targeted or whole transcriptome sequencing assays can also be used. After reverse transcription to convert extracted RNA to cDNA, hybridisation capture is carried out using capture probes in a method similar to that used in DNA-based sequencing. With this method, only one fusion partner needs to be known. The clinically validated assay, OSU-SpARKFuse, which uses such an approach, demonstrated 93.3% sensitivity and 100% specificity for fusion detection [45]. One of the main drawbacks to working with RNA is its lability. RNA can be extracted from FFPE tissue, but because it is susceptible to fragmentation and degradation, especially in older material, adequate quality control is required. Methods to interrogate RNA quality can be analysis of RNA fragment size distribution and examining amplification of a housekeeping gene in a quantitative PCR-based assay [46]. For assessing quality of the sequencing assay, one can determine the ratio of RNA reads to DNA reads and examine sequencing coverage and depth for the RNA reads. Finally, it should be noted that some commercially available platforms are able to simultaneously assess both RNA and DNA. The DNA and RNA libraries are prepared separately, but then can be combined for analysis in a single sequencing run. The Oncomine Comprehensive Assay by ThermoFisher, which uses amplicon-based technology, covers 161 pan class="Disease">cancer-related genes and can detect fusions involving all three NTRK genes. Per ThermoFisher’s technical specifications, the assay can be carried out with as few as three FFPE slides or as little as 10 ng of DNA or RNA. The TruSight Oncology 500 assay by Illumina uses hybridisation-capture technology to interrogate DNA-level alterations involving 523 pan class="Disease">cancer-related genes, and it also sequences RNA-transcripts to detect fusions involving any of 55 genes, including all three NTRK genes.

Testing algorithm considerations

While the importance of identifying patients that could benefit from targeted therapy cannot be understated, feasibility and economic considerations should also be taken into account when creating testing algorithms and guidelines. Triaging specimens should be based not only on tumour type and its pre-test probability for NTRK fusions, but also on the availability of clinically validated methodologies along with their positive and negative predictive values (Figure 2). Overall, a comprehensive diagnostic algorithm that is appropriate for all clinical situations and laboratories is difficult to propose and depends on all of these factors. Here, we discuss a few considerations based on the observation that a few rare cancer types commonly harbour NTRK fusions whereas common cancer types rarely harbour NTRK fusions. However, in absolute numbers, the latter group contributes the majority of patients with NTRK fusions.
Figure 2.

Diagnostic algorithm for NTRK testing. Histology-based triaging should first be carried out to separate the rare cancer subtypes that commonly have NTRK fusions from those that have a low pre-test probability of NTRK fusions. In the tumours that often have oncogenic NTRK fusions, confirmatory methods can be used. In secretory carcinomas, pan-TRK immunohistochemistry can be used as an initial screen, but if negative, additional testing with FISH or RNA-level fusion testing should be used. In sarcomas, immunohistochemistry should be eschewed due to its lower specificity. It is also worth noting that comprehensive fusion testing (for all major sarcoma fusions) is increasingly being carried out as a first-line test in sarcomas rather than waiting for results from a DNA-based triage as one would in carcinoma. We therefore recommend inclusion of NTRK primers in comprehensive sarcoma fusion test panels. In cancers with a low pre-test probability of NTRK fusion, such as most carcinomas, gliomas and melanomas, molecular testing such as DNA-based cancer gene panels is often carried out, and driver status can therefore be used to narrow down the tumours that should undergo further screening for oncogenic fusions, as NTRK fusions are typically mutually exclusive with other common mitogenic driver alterations that activate MAPK signalling. The resulting ‘driver-negative’ cases are therefore likely enriched for NTRK fusions and these can be screened for by IHC or an RNA-based fusion panel assay. For lung and colorectal cancer, we highlight how to further enrich for NTRK fusions in settings where broad, routine screening is not possible.

Diagnostic algorithm for NTRK testing. Histology-based triaging should first be carried out to separate the rare cancer subtypes that commonly have NTRK fusions from those that have a low pre-test probability of NTRK fusions. In the tumours that often have oncogenic NTRK fusions, confirmatory methods can be used. In secretory carcinomas, pan-TRK immunohistochemistry can be used as an initial screen, but if negative, additional testing with FISH or RNA-level fusion testing should be used. In sarcomas, immunohistochemistry should be eschewed due to its lower specificity. It is also worth noting that comprehensive fusion testing (for all major sarcoma fusions) is increasingly being carried out as a first-line test in sarcomas rather than waiting for results from a DNA-based triage as one would in carcinoma. We therefore recommend inclusion of NTRK primers in comprehensive sarcoma fusion test panels. In cancers with a low pre-test probability of NTRK fusion, such as most carcinomas, gliomas and melanomas, molecular testing such as DNA-based cancer gene panels is often carried out, and driver status can therefore be used to narrow down the tumours that should undergo further screening for oncogenic fusions, as NTRK fusions are typically mutually exclusive with other common mitogenic driver alterations that activate MAPK signalling. The resulting ‘driver-negative’ cases are therefore likely enriched for NTRK fusions and these can be screened for by IHC or an RNA-based fusion panel assay. For lung and colorectal cancer, we highlight how to further enrich for NTRK fusions in settings where broad, routine screening is not possible.

Histology-based triaging

The rare cancer subtypes that commonly harbour NTRK fusions include secretory carcinomas of the breast and salivary glands, infantile fibrosarcoma, congenital mesoblastic nephroma and paediatric papillary thyroid cancer. For these tumours, a histology-based testing algorithm is preferred and confirmation of the NTRK fusion should be carried out using a preferred method that has high specificity, such as FISH or DNA-based NGS. If negative by a single method, additional testing should be carried out.

Mass screening-based detection

The second group includes many cancer types with a low probability (<1%) of harbouring NTRK fusions. These low probability cancers include lung cancer, breast cancer, colorectal cancer, pancreatic cancer, cholangiocarcinomas, adult papillary thyroid cancer (2%), melanomas, gliomas and sarcomas (gastrointestinal stromal tumour, uterine and soft tissue). Mass screening approaches include comprehensive molecular evaluation using broad NGS that includes assessment for NTRK fusions as part of broad panels, as described above, or routine screening by immunohistochemistry, with the caveats and limitations stated above. Mass screening-based detection is not algorithmic and involves no triaging; it refers to testing all patients either by immunohistochemistry or by comprehensive DNA- and RNA-based panels. Therefore, it is intrinsically inefficient if one is solely screening for an alteration with very low prevalence, such as NTRK fusions.

Genomic-based triaging

In many cases in the group of cancer types with a low probability (<1%) of harbouring NTRK fusions, one can triage tumours that are more likely to harbour NTRK fusions based on their genomic profiles. NTRK fusions are typically mutually exclusive with KRAS, NRAS, BRAF, MAP2K1, EGFR, ALK, RET, ROS1, KIT, PDGFRA and other common mitogenic ‘driver’ alterations that activate MAPK signalling. Thus, excluding cases in which a known mitogenic driver has been identified (‘driver-negative’) can significantly narrow down the number of cases to be systematically screened for NTRK fusions. For example, in a recent study, we observed a high yield of RNA sequencing for targetable kinase fusions, including NTRK fusions, in driver-negative lung adenocarcinomas that also showed low tumour mutation burden [44]. In another similar study, Cocco et al. examined a cohort of 2314 colorectal adenocarcinomas with MSK-IMPACT, identifying 21 cases with kinase fusions, including 8 with NTRK fusions. Of the 21 cases with kinase fusions, a majority (57%, 12/21) were present in cases that had microsatellite instability. Of a cohort of 24 colorectal carcinoma cases that exhibited microsatellite instability due to MLH1 promoter methylation and that did not have driver mutations in RAS or BRAF, 10 harboured kinase fusions, including 6 that had NTRK fusions. Overall, the findings from this study identify a subset of colorectal carcinomas for which there should be a high suspicion of kinase fusions [47]. Therefore, it may be most efficient to focus ancillary testing on colonic adenocarcinomas that have microsatellite instability and that lack other conventional driver mutations. For lung and colorectal cancer, such approaches highlight how to further enrich for NTRK fusions in settings where broad, routine screening is not possible. We do not propose restricting further testing to these subsets of driver-negative lung or colorectal cases but mainly wish to emphasise which types of cases should be of highest priority for further screening.

Discussion

Conclusions

Oncogenic NTRK gene fusions occur in many different tumour types. While present in a majority of certain rare tumours, they are also rarely present in many common cancers. With the recent FDA approval of NTRK targeted therapy and the marked and durable responses these agents produce in patients with NTRK fusion-positive cancers, identification of tumours harbouring these fusions has become essential. Our approach echoes the recently published recommendations of the ESMO Translational Research and Precision Medicine Working Group [48], but we place more emphasis on genomic-based triage. Further downstream in the cancer care timeline, as we more routinely detect NTRK fusions that make patients eligible for TRK inhibitors, we will also have to consider how our molecular diagnostic tests detect mechanisms of acquired resistance in these patients, both on-target second site mutations in the NTRK kinase domain [49, 50] and alterations that activate bypass signalling pathways [51].
  50 in total

1.  The neurotrophic factors brain-derived neurotrophic factor and neurotrophin-3 are ligands for the trkB tyrosine kinase receptor.

Authors:  D Soppet; E Escandon; J Maragos; D S Middlemas; S W Reid; J Blair; L E Burton; B R Stanton; D R Kaplan; T Hunter; K Nikolics; L F Parada
Journal:  Cell       Date:  1991-05-31       Impact factor: 41.582

2.  Clinicopathologic Features of Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer Harboring an NTRK Gene Fusion.

Authors:  Anna F Farago; Martin S Taylor; Robert C Doebele; Viola W Zhu; Shivaani Kummar; Alexander I Spira; Theresa A Boyle; Eric B Haura; Maria E Arcila; Ryma Benayed; Dara L Aisner; Nora K Horick; Jochen K Lennerz; Long P Le; A John Iafrate; Sai-Hong I Ou; Alice T Shaw; Mari Mino-Kenudson; Alexander Drilon
Journal:  JCO Precis Oncol       Date:  2018-07-23

3.  A novel ETV6-NTRK3 gene fusion in congenital fibrosarcoma.

Authors:  S R Knezevich; D E McFadden; W Tao; J F Lim; P H Sorensen
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  1998-02       Impact factor: 38.330

4.  Safety and Antitumor Activity of the Multitargeted Pan-TRK, ROS1, and ALK Inhibitor Entrectinib: Combined Results from Two Phase I Trials (ALKA-372-001 and STARTRK-1).

Authors:  Alexander Drilon; Salvatore Siena; Sai-Hong Ignatius Ou; Manish Patel; Myung Ju Ahn; Jeeyun Lee; Todd M Bauer; Anna F Farago; Jennifer J Wheler; Stephen V Liu; Robert Doebele; Laura Giannetta; Giulio Cerea; Giovanna Marrapese; Michele Schirru; Alessio Amatu; Katia Bencardino; Laura Palmeri; Andrea Sartore-Bianchi; Angelo Vanzulli; Sara Cresta; Silvia Damian; Matteo Duca; Elena Ardini; Gang Li; Jason Christiansen; Karey Kowalski; Ann D Johnson; Rupal Patel; David Luo; Edna Chow-Maneval; Zachary Hornby; Pratik S Multani; Alice T Shaw; Filippo G De Braud
Journal:  Cancer Discov       Date:  2017-02-09       Impact factor: 39.397

5.  Molecular characterization of cancers with NTRK gene fusions.

Authors:  Zoran Gatalica; Joanne Xiu; Jeffrey Swensen; Semir Vranic
Journal:  Mod Pathol       Date:  2018-08-31       Impact factor: 7.842

6.  Identification of kinase fusion oncogenes in post-Chernobyl radiation-induced thyroid cancers.

Authors:  Julio C Ricarte-Filho; Sheng Li; Maria E R Garcia-Rendueles; Cristina Montero-Conde; Francesca Voza; Jeffrey A Knauf; Adriana Heguy; Agnes Viale; Tetyana Bogdanova; Geraldine A Thomas; Christopher E Mason; James A Fagin
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2013-10-25       Impact factor: 14.808

7.  Resistance to TRK inhibition mediated by convergent MAPK pathway activation.

Authors:  Emiliano Cocco; Alison M Schram; Amanda Kulick; Sandra Misale; Helen H Won; Rona Yaeger; Pedram Razavi; Ryan Ptashkin; Jaclyn F Hechtman; Eneda Toska; James Cownie; Romel Somwar; Sophie Shifman; Marissa Mattar; S Duygu Selçuklu; Aliaksandra Samoila; Sean Guzman; Brian B Tuch; Kevin Ebata; Elisa de Stanchina; Rebecca J Nagy; Richard B Lanman; Brian Houck-Loomis; Juber A Patel; Michael F Berger; Marc Ladanyi; David M Hyman; Alexander Drilon; Maurizio Scaltriti
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2019-08-12       Impact factor: 53.440

Review 8.  Detection of Tumor NTRK Gene Fusions to Identify Patients Who May Benefit from Tyrosine Kinase (TRK) Inhibitor Therapy.

Authors:  Susan J Hsiao; Ahmet Zehir; Anthony N Sireci; Dara L Aisner
Journal:  J Mol Diagn       Date:  2019-05-07       Impact factor: 5.568

Review 9.  Inhibiting TRK Proteins in Clinical Cancer Therapy.

Authors:  Allison M Lange; Hui-Wen Lo
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2018-04-04       Impact factor: 6.639

10.  Diagnosis of known sarcoma fusions and novel fusion partners by targeted RNA sequencing with identification of a recurrent ACTB-FOSB fusion in pseudomyogenic hemangioendothelioma.

Authors:  Guo Zhu; Ryma Benayed; Caleb Ho; Kerry Mullaney; Purvil Sukhadia; Kelly Rios; Ryan Berry; Brian P Rubin; Khedoudja Nafa; Lu Wang; David S Klimstra; Marc Ladanyi; Meera R Hameed
Journal:  Mod Pathol       Date:  2018-11-21       Impact factor: 7.842

View more
  32 in total

Review 1.  Salivary-Like Tumors of the Thyroid: A Comprehensive Review of Three Rare Carcinomas.

Authors:  Meagan Chambers; Vânia Nosé; Peter M Sadow; Laura J Tafe; Darcy A Kerr
Journal:  Head Neck Pathol       Date:  2020-06-19

Review 2.  A review of NTRK fusions in cancer.

Authors:  Cristina Alexandra Manea; Dumitru Cristinel Badiu; Ioan Cristian Ploscaru; Anca Zgura; Xenia Bacinschi; Catalin Gabriel Smarandache; Dragos Serban; Cristian Gabriel Popescu; Valentin Titus Grigorean; Vladimir Botnarciuc
Journal:  Ann Med Surg (Lond)       Date:  2022-06-13

3.  Standardized evidence-based approach for assessment of oncogenic and clinical significance of NTRK fusions.

Authors:  Jason Saliba; Alanna J Church; Shruti Rao; Arpad Danos; Larissa V Furtado; Theodore Laetsch; Liying Zhang; Valentina Nardi; Wan-Hsin Lin; Deborah I Ritter; Subha Madhavan; Marilyn M Li; Obi L Griffith; Malachi Griffith; Gordana Raca; Angshumoy Roy
Journal:  Cancer Genet       Date:  2022-03-16

Review 4.  Incorporating Genomic and Genetic Testing into the Treatment of Metastatic Luminal Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Sabine Grill; Evelyn Klein
Journal:  Breast Care (Basel)       Date:  2021-01-20       Impact factor: 2.860

Review 5.  Targeting the NTRK Fusion Gene in Pancreatic Acinar Cell Carcinoma: A Case Report and Review of the Literature.

Authors:  Medhavi Gupta; Christopher Sherrow; Maghan E Krone; Edik M Blais; Michael J Pishvaian; Emanuel F Petricoin; Lynn M Matrisian; Patricia DeArbeloa; Gary Gregory; Alyson Brown; Olivia Zalewski; Gillian Prinzing; Charles Roche; Kazunori Kanehira; Sarbajit Mukherjee; Renuka Iyer; Christos Fountzilas
Journal:  J Natl Compr Canc Netw       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 11.908

6.  Robust detection of translocations in lymphoma FFPE samples using targeted locus capture-based sequencing.

Authors:  Mark Pieterse; Joost Swennenhuis; G Tjitske Los-de Vries; Amin Allahyar; Mehmet Yilmaz; Roos Leguit; Ruud W J Meijers; Robert van der Geize; Joost Vermaat; Arjen Cleven; Tom van Wezel; Arjan Diepstra; Léon C van Kempen; Nathalie J Hijmering; Phylicia Stathi; Milan Sharma; Adrien S J Melquiond; Paula J P de Vree; Marjon J A M Verstegen; Peter H L Krijger; Karima Hajo; Marieke Simonis; Agata Rakszewska; Max van Min; Daphne de Jong; Bauke Ylstra; Harma Feitsma; Erik Splinter; Wouter de Laat
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-06-07       Impact factor: 14.919

Review 7.  NTRK Fusions, from the Diagnostic Algorithm to Innovative Treatment in the Era of Precision Medicine.

Authors:  Federica Zito Marino; Francesca Pagliuca; Andrea Ronchi; Immacolata Cozzolino; Marco Montella; Massimiliano Berretta; Maria Elena Errico; Vittoria Donofrio; Roberto Bianco; Renato Franco
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-05-25       Impact factor: 5.923

Review 8.  Combinatorial Therapies in Thyroid Cancer: An Overview of Preclinical and Clinical Progresses.

Authors:  Gheysen Laetitia; Saussez Sven; Journe Fabrice
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2020-03-30       Impact factor: 6.600

Review 9.  Update on Fundamental Mechanisms of Thyroid Cancer.

Authors:  Alessandro Prete; Patricia Borges de Souza; Simona Censi; Marina Muzza; Nicole Nucci; Marialuisa Sponziello
Journal:  Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)       Date:  2020-03-13       Impact factor: 5.555

Review 10.  Tyrosine Kinase Receptors in Oncology.

Authors:  Jorge Esteban-Villarrubia; Juan José Soto-Castillo; Javier Pozas; María San Román-Gil; Inmaculada Orejana-Martín; Javier Torres-Jiménez; Alfredo Carrato; Teresa Alonso-Gordoa; Javier Molina-Cerrillo
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-11-12       Impact factor: 5.923

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.