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RASMutations in Cutaneous Squamous-Cell Carcinomas in Patients Treated with BRAF Inhibitors

Authors :
Holly Hilton
Nicholas Otte
Julie S. Hang
Ion Niculescu-Duvaz
Felipe C. Geyer
Lidia Robert
K. B. Nolop
Jorge S. Reis-Filho
Luc Andries
Alfonso Zambon
Gideon Bollag
Rene Gonzalez
Natasha Preece
Paul B. Chapman
Damien Kee
Min Jung Kim
Kerstin Trunzer
Dan Niculescu-Duvaz
Stephen Mok
Brian Lestini
Roger S. Lo
Gaston Habets
Amaya Viros
James L. Troy
Caroline J. Springer
Mark M. Kockx
Yan Ma
Igor Puzanov
Carla Milagre
Robert Hayward
Elizabeth A. Burton
Antoni Ribas
Xiangju Kong
Chao Zhang
Matthew J. Martin
Maryou B K Lambros
Andrew K. Joe
Richard C. Koya
Jeffrey A. Sosman
Olivia Spleiss
Johannes Noe
Bartosz Chmielowski
Hoa Nguyen
Richard J. Lee
Keith T. Flaherty
Richard Marais
Nathalie Dhomen
Hong Yang
Bernice Wong
Qiongqing Wang
Grant A. McArthur
Fei Su
Thomas E. Hutson
Source :
ResearcherID
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Massachusetts Medical Society, 2012.

Abstract

Cutaneous squamous-cell carcinomas and keratoacanthomas are common findings in patients treated with BRAF inhibitors.We performed a molecular analysis to identify oncogenic mutations (HRAS, KRAS, NRAS, CDKN2A, and TP53) in the lesions from patients treated with the BRAF inhibitor vemurafenib. An analysis of an independent validation set and functional studies with BRAF inhibitors in the presence of the prevalent RAS mutation was also performed.Among 21 tumor samples, 13 had RAS mutations (12 in HRAS). In a validation set of 14 samples, 8 had RAS mutations (4 in HRAS). Thus, 60% (21 of 35) of the specimens harbored RAS mutations, the most prevalent being HRAS Q61L. Increased proliferation of HRAS Q61L-mutant cell lines exposed to vemurafenib was associated with mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)-pathway signaling and activation of ERK-mediated transcription. In a mouse model of HRAS Q61L-mediated skin carcinogenesis, the vemurafenib analogue PLX4720 was not an initiator or a promoter of carcinogenesis but accelerated growth of the lesions harboring HRAS mutations, and this growth was blocked by concomitant treatment with a MEK inhibitor.Mutations in RAS, particularly HRAS, are frequent in cutaneous squamous-cell carcinomas and keratoacanthomas that develop in patients treated with vemurafenib. The molecular mechanism is consistent with the paradoxical activation of MAPK signaling and leads to accelerated growth of these lesions. (Funded by Hoffmann-La Roche and others; ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT00405587, NCT00949702, NCT01001299, and NCT01006980.).

Details

ISSN :
15334406 and 00284793
Volume :
366
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
New England Journal of Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....70df6e63cf85087ba092fc0b51ca5514
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmoa1105358