Spectrum of Oncogenic Driver Mutations in Lung Adenocarcinomas from East Asian Never Smokers

Chenguang Li(Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences), Rong Fang(Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences), Yihua Sun(Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center), Xiangkun Han(Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences), Fei Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Bin Gao(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), A. John Iafrate(Massachusetts General Hospital), Xin‐Yuan Liu(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), William Pao(Vanderbilt University), Haiquan Chen(Shanghai Medical College of Fudan University), Hongbin Ji(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
PLoS ONE
November 30, 2011
Cited by 227Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE: We previously showed that 90% (47 of 52; 95% CI, 0.79 to 0.96) of lung adenocarcinomas from East Asian never-smokers harbored well-known oncogenic mutations in just four genes: EGFR, HER2, ALK, and KRAS. Here, we sought to extend these findings to more samples and identify driver alterations in tumors negative for these mutations. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We have collected and analyzed 202 resected lung adenocarcinomas from never smokers seen at Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center. Since mutations were mutually exclusive in the first 52 examined, we determined the status of EGFR, KRAS, HER2, ALK, and BRAF in stepwise fashion as previously described. Samples negative for mutations in these 5 genes were subsequently examined for known ROS1 fusions by RT-PCR and direct sequencing. RESULTS: 152 tumors (75.3%) harbored EGFR mutations, 12 (6%) had HER2 mutations, 10 (5%) had ALK fusions all involving EML4 as the 5' partner, 4 (2%) had KRAS mutations, and 2 (1%) harbored ROS1 fusions. No BRAF mutation were detected. CONCLUSION: The vast majority (176 of 202; 87.1%, 95% CI: 0.82 to 0.91) of lung adenocarcinomas from never smokers harbor mutant kinases sensitive to available TKIs. Interestingly, patients with EGFR mutant patients tend to be older than those without EGFR mutations (58.3 Vs 54.3, P = 0.016) and patient without any known oncogenic driver tend to be diagnosed at a younger age (52.3 Vs 57.9, P = 0.013). Collectively, these data indicate that the majority of never smokers with lung adenocarcinoma could benefit from treatment with a specific tyrosine kinase inhibitor.


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