| Literature DB >> 32017710 |
Michael W Ronellenfitsch1,2,3,4, Patrick N Harter2,3,4,5, Martina Kirchner6, Christoph Heining7,8,9, Barbara Hutter10,11,12, Laura Gieldon8,13,14,15,16,17, Jens Schittenhelm18, Martin U Schuhmann19,20, Marcos Tatagiba19,20, Gerhard Marquardt21, Marlies Wagner22, Volker Endris6, Christian H Brandts2,3,4,23, Victor-Felix Mautner24, Evelin Schröck8,13,14,15,16, Wilko Weichert25,26, Benedikt Brors10,11,12, Andreas von Deimling12,27,28, Michel Mittelbronn5,29,30,31,32, Joachim P Steinbach1,2,3,4, David E Reuss12,27,28, Hanno Glimm7,8,9,33, Albrecht Stenzinger6,12, Stefan Fröhling11,12,34.
Abstract
BACKGROUNDNeurofibroma/schwannoma hybrid nerve sheath tumors (N/S HNSTs) are neoplasms associated with larger nerves that occur sporadically and in the context of schwannomatosis or neurofibromatosis type 2 or 1. Clinical management of N/S HNSTs is challenging, especially for large tumors, and established systemic treatments are lacking.METHODSWe used next-generation sequencing and array-based DNA methylation profiling to determine the clinically actionable genomic and epigenomic landscapes of N/S HNSTs.RESULTSWhole-exome sequencing within a precision oncology program identified an activating mutation (p.Asp769Tyr) in the catalytic domain of the ERBB2 receptor tyrosine kinase in a patient with schwannomatosis-associated N/S HNST, and targeted treatment with the small-molecule ERBB inhibitor lapatinib led to prolonged clinical benefit and a lasting radiographic and metabolic response. Analysis of a multicenter validation cohort revealed recurrent ERBB2 mutations (p.Leu755Ser, p.Asp769Tyr, p.Val777Leu) in N/S HNSTs occurring in patients who met diagnostic criteria for sporadic schwannomatosis (3 of 7 patients), but not in N/S HNSTs arising in the context of neurofibromatosis (6 patients) or outside a tumor syndrome (1 patient), and showed that ERBB2-mutant N/S HNSTs cluster in a distinct subgroup of peripheral nerve sheath tumors based on genome-wide DNA methylation patterns.CONCLUSIONThese findings uncover a key biological feature of N/S HNSTs that may have important diagnostic and therapeutic implications.FUNDINGThis work was supported by grant H021 from DKFZ-HIPO, the University Cancer Center Frankfurt, and the Frankfurt Research Funding Clinician Scientist Program.Entities:
Keywords: Genetics; Molecular diagnosis; Neurological disorders; Oncogenes; Oncology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32017710 PMCID: PMC7190903 DOI: 10.1172/JCI130787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808