A comprehensive survey of genomic alterations in gastric cancer reveals systematic patterns of molecular exclusivity and co-occurrence among distinct therapeutic targets

Niantao Deng(National University of Singapore), Liang Kee Goh(National Cancer Centre Singapore), Hannah Wang(Duke-NUS Medical School), Kakoli Das(Duke-NUS Medical School), Jiong Tao(National University of Singapore), Iain Beehuat Tan(National Cancer Centre Singapore), Shenli Zhang(Duke-NUS Medical School), Ming‐Hui Lee(National Cancer Centre Singapore), Jeanie Wu(National Cancer Centre Singapore), Kiat Hon Lim(Singapore General Hospital), Zhengdeng Lei(Duke-NUS Medical School), Glenn Goh(Duke-NUS Medical School), Qing-Yan Lim(Nanyang Technological University), Angie Lay-Keng Tan(Duke-NUS Medical School), Dianne Poh(Duke-NUS Medical School), Sudep Riahi(University of Leeds), Sandra Bell(University of Leeds), Michael Shi(Novartis (United States)), Ronald Linnartz(Novartis (United States)), Feng Zhu(National University Health System), Khay Guan Yeoh(National University Health System), Han Chong Toh(National Cancer Centre Singapore), Wei Peng Yong(National University Health System), Hyun Cheol Cheong(Yonsei University), Sun Young Rha(Yonsei University), Alex Boussioutas(Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre), Heike I. Grabsch, Steve Rozen(Duke-NUS Medical School), Patrick Tan(Duke-NUS Medical School)
Gut
February 7, 2012
Cited by 643Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Gastric cancer is a major gastrointestinal malignancy for which targeted therapies are emerging as treatment options. This study sought to identify the most prevalent molecular targets in gastric cancer and to elucidate systematic patterns of exclusivity and co-occurrence among these targets, through comprehensive genomic analysis of a large panel of gastric cancers. DESIGN: Using high-resolution single nucleotide polymorphism arrays, copy number alterations were profiled in a panel of 233 gastric cancers (193 primary tumours, 40 cell lines) and 98 primary matched gastric non-malignant samples. For selected alterations, their impact on gene expression and clinical outcome were evaluated. RESULTS: 22 recurrent focal alterations (13 amplifications and nine deletions) were identified. These included both known targets (FGFR2, ERBB2) and also novel genes in gastric cancer (KLF5, GATA6). Receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK)/RAS alterations were found to be frequent in gastric cancer. This study also demonstrates, for the first time, that these alterations occur in a mutually exclusive fashion, with KRAS gene amplifications highlighting a clinically relevant but previously underappreciated gastric cancer subgroup. FGFR2-amplified gastric cancers were also shown to be sensitive to dovitinib, an orally bioavailable FGFR/VEGFR targeting agent, potentially representing a subtype-specific therapy for FGFR2-amplified gastric cancers. CONCLUSION: The study demonstrates the existence of five distinct gastric cancer patient subgroups, defined by the signature genomic alterations FGFR2 (9% of tumours), KRAS (9%), EGFR (8%), ERBB2 (7%) and MET (4%). Collectively, these subgroups suggest that at least 37% of gastric cancer patients may be potentially treatable by RTK/RAS directed therapies.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis