Identification of Genes Upregulated in <i>ALK</i> -Positive and <i>EGFR/KRAS/ALK</i> -Negative Lung Adenocarcinomas

Hirokazu Okayama(Fukushima Medical University), Takashi Kohno(Fukushima Medical University), Yuko Ishii(Fukushima Medical University), Yoko Shimada(Fukushima Medical University), Kouya Shiraishi(Fukushima Medical University), Reika Iwakawa(Fukushima Medical University), Koh Furuta(Fukushima Medical University), Koji Tsuta(Fukushima Medical University), Tatsuhiro Shibata(Fukushima Medical University), Seiichiro Yamamoto(Fukushima Medical University), Shun‐ichi Watanabe(Fukushima Medical University), Hiromi Sakamoto(Fukushima Medical University), Kensuke Kumamoto(Fukushima Medical University), Seiichi Takenoshita(Fukushima Medical University), Noriko Gotoh(Fukushima Medical University), Hideaki Mizuno(Fukushima Medical University), Akinori Sarai(Fukushima Medical University), Shuichi Kawano(Fukushima Medical University), Rui Yamaguchi(Fukushima Medical University), Satoru Miyano(Fukushima Medical University), Jun Yokota(Fukushima Medical University)
Cancer Research
November 12, 2011
Cited by 879Open Access
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Abstract

Activation of the EGFR, KRAS, and ALK oncogenes defines 3 different pathways of molecular pathogenesis in lung adenocarcinoma. However, many tumors lack activation of any pathway (triple-negative lung adenocarcinomas) posing a challenge for prognosis and treatment. Here, we report an extensive genome-wide expression profiling of 226 primary human stage I-II lung adenocarcinomas that elucidates molecular characteristics of tumors that harbor ALK mutations or that lack EGFR, KRAS, and ALK mutations, that is, triple-negative adenocarcinomas. One hundred and seventy-four genes were selected as being upregulated specifically in 79 lung adenocarcinomas without EGFR and KRAS mutations. Unsupervised clustering using a 174-gene signature, including ALK itself, classified these 2 groups of tumors into ALK-positive cases and 2 distinct groups of triple-negative cases (groups A and B). Notably, group A triple-negative cases had a worse prognosis for relapse and death, compared with cases with EGFR, KRAS, or ALK mutations or group B triple-negative cases. In ALK-positive tumors, 30 genes, including ALK and GRIN2A, were commonly overexpressed, whereas in group A triple-negative cases, 9 genes were commonly overexpressed, including a candidate diagnostic/therapeutic target DEPDC1, that were determined to be critical for predicting a worse prognosis. Our findings are important because they provide a molecular basis of ALK-positive lung adenocarcinomas and triple-negative lung adenocarcinomas and further stratify more or less aggressive subgroups of triple-negative lung ADC, possibly helping identify patients who may gain the most benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy after surgical resection.


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