| Literature DB >> 33610559 |
Kevin B Kim1, Liliana Soroceanu2, David de Semir3, Sherri Z Millis4, Jeffrey Ross5, Elham Vosoughi3, Altaf A Dar3, Mehdi Nosrati3, Pierre-Yves Desprez2, Ryan Ice2, Michelle Chen2, Kashish Chetal6, Anukana Bhattacharjee6, John Moretto7, Stanley P Leong7, Mark I Singer7, Brian M Parrett7, David R Minor7, Sean McAllister2, James R Miller3, Nathan Salomonis6, Mohammed Kashani-Sabet3.
Abstract
Homologous recombination DNA damage repair (HR-DDR) deficient patients with various solid tumors have been treated with PARP inhibitors. However, the clinical characteristics of patients with melanoma who have HR-DDR gene mutations and the consequences of PARP inhibition are poorly understood. We compared the commercially available next-generation sequencing data from 84 patients with melanomas from our institution with a dataset of 1,986 patients as well as 1,088 patients profiled in cBioportal. In total, 21.4% of patients had ≥1 functional HR-DDR mutation, most commonly involving BRCA1, ARID1A, ATM, ATR, and FANCA. Concurrent NF1, BRAF, and NRAS mutations were found in 39%, 39%, and 22% of cases, respectively. HR-DDR gene mutation was associated with high tumor mutational burden and clinical response to checkpoint blockade. A higher prevalence of HR-DDR mutations was observed in the datasets from Foundation Medicine (Cambridge, CA) and those from the Cancer Genome Atlas. Treatment of HR-DDR‒mutated patient-derived xenograft models of melanoma with PARP inhibitor produced significant antitumor activity in vivo and was associated with increased apoptotic activity. RNA sequencing analysis of PARP inhibitor-treated tumors indicated alterations in the pathways involving extracellular matrix remodeling, cell adhesion, and cell-cycle progression. Melanomas with HR-DDR mutations represent a unique subset, which is more likely to benefit from checkpoint blockade and may be targeted with PARP inhibitor.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33610559 DOI: 10.1016/j.jid.2021.01.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Invest Dermatol ISSN: 0022-202X Impact factor: 8.551