Mutational profiling of brain metastasis from breast cancer: matched pair analysis of targeted sequencing between brain metastasis and primary breast cancer
Author(s) -
Ji Yun Lee,
Kyunghee Park,
Sung Hee Lim,
Hae Su Kim,
Kwai Han Yoo,
Ki Sun Jung,
HaaNa Song,
Min Eui Hong,
InGu Do,
TaeJin Ahn,
Se Kyung Lee,
Soo Youn Bae,
Seok Won Kim,
Joon Jeong,
Seok Jin Nam,
Duk-Hwan Kim,
Hae Hyun Jung,
JiYeon Kim,
Jin Seok Ahn,
YoungHyuck Im,
Yeon Hee Park
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
oncotarget
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.373
H-Index - 127
ISSN - 1949-2553
DOI - 10.18632/oncotarget.6192
Subject(s) - brain metastasis , breast cancer , mlh1 , metastasis , cancer , oncology , medicine , triple negative breast cancer , gene expression profiling , cancer research , biology , pathology , gene , gene expression , genetics , dna mismatch repair , colorectal cancer
Although breast cancer is the second most common cause of brain metastasis with a notable increase of incidence, genes that mediate breast cancer brain metastasis (BCBM) are not fully understood. To study the molecular nature of brain metastasis, we performed gene expression profiling of brain metastasis and matched primary breast cancer (BC). We used the Ion AmpliSeq Cancer Panel v2 covering 2,855 mutations from 50 cancer genes to analyze 18 primary BC and 42 BCBM including 15 matched pairs. The most common BCBM subtypes were triple-negative (42.9%) and basal-like (36.6%). In a total of 42 BCBM samples, 32 (76.2%) harbored at least one mutation (median 1, range 0-7 mutations). Frequently detected somatic mutations included TP53 (59.5%), MLH1 (14.3%), PIK3CA (14.3%), and KIT (7.1%). We compared BCBM with patient-matched primary BC specimens. There were no significant differences in mutation profiles between the two groups. Notably, gene expression in BCBM such as TP53, PIK3CA, KIT, MLH1, and RB1 also seemed to be present in primary breast cancers. The TP53 mutation frequency was higher in BCBM than in primary BC (59.5% vs 38.9%, respectively). In conclusion, we found actionable gene alterations in BCBM that were maintained in primary BC. Further studies with functional testing and a delineation of the role of these genes in specific steps of the metastatic process should lead to a better understanding of the biology of metastasis and its susceptibility to treatment.
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