| Literature DB >> 33322618 |
Franciele H Knebel1,2, Louise J Barber1, Alice Newey1, Dimitrios Kleftogiannis3, Andrew Woolston1, Beatrice Griffiths1, Kerry Fenwick4, Fabiana Bettoni2, Maurício Fernando Silva Almeida Ribeiro2, Leonardo da Fonseca2, Frederico Costa2, Fernanda Cunha Capareli2, Paulo M Hoff5, Jorge Sabbaga2, Anamaria A Camargo2, Marco Gerlinger1,6.
Abstract
Epidermal growth factor receptor antibodies (EGFR-Abs) confer a survival benefit in patients with RAS wild-type metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC), but resistance invariably occurs. Previous data showed that only a minority of cancer cells harboured known genetic resistance drivers when clinical resistance to single-agent EGFR-Abs had evolved, supporting the activity of non-genetic resistance mechanisms. Here, we used error-corrected ctDNA-sequencing (ctDNA-Seq) of 40 cancer genes to identify drivers of resistance and whether a genetic resistance-gap (a lack of detectable genetic resistance mechanisms in a large fraction of the cancer cell population) also occurs in RAS wild-type mCRCs treated with a combination of EGFR-Abs and chemotherapy. We detected one MAP2K1/MEK1 mutation and one ERBB2 amplification in 2/3 patients with primary resistance and KRAS, NRAS, MAP2K1/MEK1 mutations and ERBB2 aberrations in 6/7 patients with acquired resistance. In vitro testing identified MAP2K1/MEK1 P124S as a novel driver of EGFR-Ab resistance. Mutation subclonality analyses confirmed a genetic resistance-gap in mCRCs treated with EGFR-Abs and chemotherapy, with only 13.42% of cancer cells harboring identifiable resistance drivers. Our results support the utility of ctDNA-Seq to guide treatment allocation for patients with resistance and the importance of investigating further non-canonical EGFR-Ab resistance mechanisms, such as microenvironmentally-mediated resistance. The detection of MAP2K1 mutations could inform trials of MEK-inhibitors in these tumours.Entities:
Keywords: EGFR-antibodies; acquired resistance; colorectal cancer; ctDNA-Sequencing; ctDNA-ddPCR; genetic resistance-gap
Year: 2020 PMID: 33322618 PMCID: PMC7764102 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12123736
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639