| Literature DB >> 34237031 |
Young Ah Lee1, Hyunjung Lee2,3, Sun-Wha Im3,4, Young Shin Song5, Do-Youn Oh6,7,8, Hyoung Jin Kang1,7,8, Jae-Kyung Won9, Kyeong Cheon Jung9, Dohee Kwon9, Eun-Jae Chung10, J Hun Hah10, Jin Chul Paeng11, Ji-Hoon Kim12, Jaeyong Choi2,3, Ok-Hee Kim13, Ji Min Oh14, Byeong-Cheol Ahn14, Lori J Wirth15, Choong Ho Shin1, Jong-Il Kim2,3,4,7, Young Joo Park3,5,16.
Abstract
BACKGROUNDMolecular characterization in pediatric papillary thyroid cancer (PTC), distinct from adult PTC, is important for developing molecularly targeted therapies for progressive radioiodine-refractory (131I-refractory) PTC.METHODSPTC samples from 106 pediatric patients (age range: 4.3-19.8 years; n = 84 girls, n = 22 boys) who were admitted to SNUH (January 1983-March 2020) were available for genomic profiling. Previous transcriptomic data from 125 adult PTC samples were used for comparison.RESULTSWe identified genetic drivers in 80 tumors: 31 with fusion oncogenes (RET in 21 patients, ALK in 6 patients, and NTRK1/3 in 4 patients); 47 with point mutations (BRAFV600E in 41 patients, TERTC228T in 2 patients [1 of whom had a coexisting BRAFV600E], and DICER1 variants in 5 patients); and 2 with amplifications. Fusion oncogene PTCs, which are predominantly detected in younger patients, were at a more advanced stage and showed more recurrent or persistent disease compared with BRAFV600E PTCs, which are detected mostly in adolescents. Pediatric fusion PTCs (in patients <10 years of age) had lower expression of thyroid differentiation genes, including SLC5A5, than did adult fusion PTCs. Two girls with progressive 131I-refractory lung metastases harboring a TPR-NTRK1 or CCDC6-RET fusion oncogene received fusion-targeted therapy; larotrectinib and selpercatinib decreased the size of the tumor and restored 125I radioiodine uptake. The girl with the CCDC6-RET fusion oncogene received 131I therapy combined with selpercatinib, resulting in a tumor response. In vitro 125I uptake and 131I clonogenic assays showed that larotrectinib inhibited tumor growth and restored radioiodine avidity.CONCLUSIONSIn pediatric patients with fusion oncogene PTC who have 131I-refractory advanced disease, selective fusion-directed therapy may restore radioiodine avidity and lead to a dramatic tumor response, underscoring the importance of molecular testing in pediatric patients with PTC.FUNDINGThe Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning (NRF-2016R1A2B4012417 and 2019R1A2C2084332); the Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare (H14C1277); the Ministry of Education (2020R1A6A1A03047972); and the SNUH Research Fund (04-2015-0830).TRIAL REGISTRATIONTwo patients received fusion-targeted therapy with larotrectinib (NCT02576431; NAVIGATE) or selpercatinib (LOXO-RET-18018).Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Endocrinology; Oncogenes; Oncology; Thyroid disease
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34237031 PMCID: PMC8439610 DOI: 10.1172/JCI144847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808