<i>KIT</i> Gene Mutations and Copy Number in Melanoma Subtypes

Carol Beadling(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Erick Jacobson‐Dunlop(Cancer Institute (WIA)), F. Stephen Hodi(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Claudia Le(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Andrea Warrick(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Janice Patterson(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Ajia Town(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Amy Harlow(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Frank Cruz, Sharl Azar(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Brian P. Rubin(Cleveland Clinic), Susan Müller(Emory University), Robert B. West, Michael C. Heinrich(Oregon Health & Science University), Christopher L. Corless(Cancer Institute (WIA))
Clinical Cancer Research
November 1, 2008
Cited by 636Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

PURPOSE: We recently identified a KIT exon 11 mutation in an anorectal melanoma of a patient who had an excellent response to treatment with imatinib. To determine the frequency of KIT mutations across melanoma subtypes, we surveyed a large series of tumors. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: One hundred eighty-nine melanomas were screened for mutations in KIT exons 11, 13, and 17. KIT copy number was assessed by quantitative PCR. A subset of cases was evaluated for BRAF and NRAS mutations. Immunohistochemistry was done to assess KIT (CD117) expression. RESULTS: KIT mutations were detected in 23% (3 of 13) of acral melanomas, 15.6% (7 of 45) of mucosal melanomas, 7.7% (1 of 13) of conjunctival melanomas, 1.7% (1 of 58) of cutaneous melanomas, and 0% (0 of 60) of choroidal melanomas. Almost all the KIT mutations were of the type predicted to be imatinib sensitive. There was no overlap with NRAS mutations (11.1% of acral and 24.3% of mucosal tumors) or with BRAF mutations (absent in mucosal tumors). Increased KIT copy number was detected in 27.3% (3 of 11) of acral and 26.3% (10 of 38) of mucosal melanomas, but was less common among cutaneous (6.7%; 3 of 45), conjunctival (7.1%; 1 of 14), and choroidal melanomas (0 of 28). CD117 expression, present in 39% of 105 tumors representing all melanoma types, did not correlate with either KIT mutation status or KIT copy number. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings confirm that KIT mutations are most common in acral and mucosal melanomas but do not necessarily correlate with KIT copy number or CD117 expression. Screening for KIT mutations may open up new treatment options for melanoma patients.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis