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EML4-ALK fusion gene and efficacy of an ALK kinase inhibitor in lung cancer

Authors :
Pasi A. Jänne
David J. Sugarbaker
Christopher T. Ducko
William G. Richards
Jinseon Lee
Jhingook Kim
Eugene Lifshits
Craig H. Mermel
J. Paul Marcoux
Derek Y. Chiang
Carly Murphy
Charles Lee
Matthew Meyerson
Alison J. Holmes
Neal I. Lindeman
Roman K. Thomas
Nathanael S. Gray
Kreshnik Zejnullahu
Hwan Geun Choi
Jeffrey A. Engelman
Jussi Koivunen
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Purpose: The EML4-ALK fusion gene has been detected in ∼7% of Japanese non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC). We determined the frequency of EML4-ALK in Caucasian NSCLC and in NSCLC cell lines. We also determined whether TAE684, a specific ALK kinase inhibitor, would inhibit the growth of EML4-ALK-containing cell lines in vitro and in vivo.Experimental Design: We screened 305 primary NSCLC [both U.S. (n = 138) and Korean (n = 167) patients] and 83 NSCLC cell lines using reverse transcription-PCR and by exon array analyses. We evaluated the efficacy of TAE684 against NSCLC cell lines in vitro and in vivo.Results: We detected four different variants, including two novel variants, of EML4-ALK using reverse transcription-PCR in 8 of 305 tumors (3%) and 3 of 83 (3.6%) NSCLC cell lines. All EML4-ALK-containing tumors and cell lines were adenocarcinomas. EML4-ALK was detected more frequently in NSCLC patients who were never or light (Conclusions: EML4-ALK is found in the minority of NSCLC. ALK kinase inhibitors alone or in combination may nevertheless be clinically effective treatments for NSCLC patients whose tumors contain EML4-ALK.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7b84db1e8ffae56fbdbd7bee0c90157c