Comprehensive genomic profiling of inflammatory breast cancer cases reveals a high frequency of clinically relevant genomic alterations

被引:0
|
作者
Jeffrey S. Ross
Siraj M. Ali
Kai Wang
Depinder Khaira
Norma A. Palma
Juliann Chmielecki
Gary A. Palmer
Deborah Morosini
Julia A. Elvin
Sandra V. Fernandez
Vincent A. Miller
Philip J. Stephens
Massimo Cristofanilli
机构
[1] Foundation Medicine,Department of Pathology
[2] Albany Medical College,undefined
[3] Thomas Jefferson University Cancer Center,undefined
来源
关键词
Inflammatory breast cancer; NGS; Comprehensive genomic profiling;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is a distinct clinicopathologic entity that carries a worse prognosis relative to non-IBC breast cancer even when matched for standard biomarkers (ER/PR/HER2). The objective of this study was to identify opportunities for benefit from targeted therapy, which are not currently identifiable in the standard workup for advanced breast cancer. Comprehensive genomic profiling on 53 IBC formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded specimens (mean, 800× + coverage) using the hybrid capture-based FoundationOne assay. Academic and community oncology clinics. From a series of 2208 clinical cases of advanced/refractory invasive breast cancers, 53 cases with IBC were identified. The presence of clinically relevant genomic alterations (CRGA) in IBC and responses to targeted therapies. CRGA were defined as genomic alterations (GA) associated with on label targeted therapies and targeted therapies in mechanism-driven clinical trials. For the 44 IBCs with available biomarker data, 19 (39 %) were ER−/PR−/HER2− (triple-negative breast cancer, TNBC). For patients in which the clinical HER2 status was known, 11 (25 %) were HER2+ with complete (100 %) concordance with ERBB2 (HER2) amplification detected by the CGP assay. The 53 sequenced IBC cases harbored a total of 266 GA with an average of 5.0 GA/tumor (range 1–15). At least one alteration associated with an FDA approved therapy or clinical trial was identified in 51/53 (96 %) of cases with an average of 2.6 CRGA/case. The most frequently altered genes were TP53 (62 %), MYC (32 %), PIK3CA (28 %), ERBB2 (26 %), FGFR1 (17 %), BRCA2 (15 %), and PTEN (15 %). In the TNBC subset of IBC, 8/19 (42 %) showed MYC amplification (median copy number 8X, range 7–20) as compared to 9/32 (28 %) in non-TNBC IBC (median copy number 7X, range 6–21). Comprehensive genomic profiling uncovered a high frequency of GA in IBC with 96 % of cases harboring at least 1 CRGA. The clinical benefit of selected targeted therapies in individual IBC cases suggests that a further study of CGP in IBC is warranted.
引用
收藏
页码:155 / 162
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Comprehensive Genomic Profiling of Collecting Duct Carcinoma of the Kidney Reveals a High Frequency of NF2 Genomic Alterations
    Palma, Norma
    Ali, Siraj
    Wang, Kai
    Elvin, Julia
    Lipson, Doron
    Rosenzweig, Mark
    Erlich, Rachel
    Chmielecki, Juliann
    Miller, Vincent
    Lin, Doug
    Stephens, Philip
    Ross, Jeffrey
    LABORATORY INVESTIGATION, 2015, 95 : 248A - 249A
  • [32] Comprehensive genomic profiling identifies clinically relevant genomic alterations in relapsed and metastatic penile squamous cell carcinoma.
    Palma, Norma Alonzo
    Ali, Siraj Mahamed
    Sanford, Eric M.
    Elvin, Julia Andrea
    Bailey, Mark
    Frampton, Garrett Michael
    Yelensky, Roman
    He, Jie
    Lipson, Doron
    Dow, Edward
    Morosini, Deborah
    Ross, Jeffrey S.
    Stephens, Phil
    Miller, Vincent A.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2015, 33 (15)
  • [33] Expanding the landscape of actionable genomic alterations in metastatic breast cancer: comprehensive genomic profiling for all?
    Hilbers, F. S.
    Aftimos, P.
    ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 2020, 31 (08) : 967 - 969
  • [34] Comprehensive genomic profiling of tumour spatial heterogeneity for clinically-actionable genomic alterations
    Killian, J. K.
    Lin, D.
    Huang, R. S.
    Ritterhouse, L.
    Lakis, S.
    Pokharel, P.
    Pavlick, D.
    Jin, D.
    Ferguson, N.
    Dennis, L.
    Fabrizio, D.
    Malboeuf, C.
    Montesion, M.
    Frampton, G.
    Murugesan, K.
    VIRCHOWS ARCHIV, 2024, 485 : S101 - S101
  • [35] Genomic Alterations in Inflammatory Breast Cancer
    Biederman, Laura
    Austin, Laura
    Cristofanilli, Massimo
    Palazzo, Juan
    LABORATORY INVESTIGATION, 2015, 95 : 35A - 35A
  • [36] Genomic Alterations in Inflammatory Breast Cancer
    Biederman, Laura
    Austin, Laura
    Cristofanilli, Massimo
    Palazzo, Juan
    MODERN PATHOLOGY, 2015, 28 : 35A - 35A
  • [37] Comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) identifies unique and abundant clinically relevant genomic alterations in rare histologies of renal cell carcinoma
    Ali, S.
    Choueiri, T.
    Wang, K.
    Khaira, D.
    Johnson, A.
    Squillace, R.
    Elvin, J.
    Chmielecki, J.
    Yelensky, R.
    Lipson, D.
    Miller, V.
    Ross, J.
    Stein, M.
    Pal, S.
    Stephens, P.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2015, 51 : S530 - S530
  • [38] Inflammatory Breast Cancer: Clinical Implications of Genomic Alterations and Mutational Profiling
    Faldoni, Flavia L. C.
    Villacis, Rolando A. R.
    Canto, Luisa M.
    Fonseca-Alves, Carlos E.
    Cury, Sarah S.
    Larsen, Simon J.
    Aagaard, Mads M.
    Souza, Cristiano P.
    Scapulatempo-Neto, Cristovam
    Osorio, Cynthia A. B. T.
    Baumbach, Jan
    Marchi, Fabio A.
    Rogatto, Silvia R.
    CANCERS, 2020, 12 (10) : 1 - 21
  • [39] Comprehensive genomic profiling of anal squamous cell carcinoma to reveal frequency of clinically relevant genomic alterations in the PI3K/mTOR pathway.
    Sanford, Eric M.
    Ali, Siraj Mahamed
    Elvin, Julia Andrea
    Frampton, Garrett Michael
    Sun, James
    Palma, Norma Alonzo
    Chmielecki, Juliann
    Yelensky, Roman
    Lipson, Doron
    Miller, Vincent A.
    Stephens, Philip J.
    Ross, Jeffrey S.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2015, 33 (15)
  • [40] Genomic profiling of breast cancer brain metastases reveals targetable alterations.
    Kabraji, Sheheryar Kairas
    Spurr, Liam F.
    Hughes, Melissa E.
    Li, Yvonne Y.
    Leone, Jose Pablo
    Garrido-Castro, Ana Christina
    Barroso-Sousa, Romualdo
    Files, Janet
    Kirkner, Gregory
    Johnson, Bruce E.
    Winer, Eric P.
    Cherniack, Andrew D.
    Lin, Nancy U.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2020, 38 (15)