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Clinical and molecular characterization of HER2 amplified-pancreatic cancer

Authors :
Christopher W. Toon
Jaswinder S. Samra
Lorraine A. Chantrill
Mark Pinese
Ilse Rooman
Nicola Waddell
David Goldstein
Katia Nones
Jeremy L. Humphris
Mark J. Cowley
Anthony J. Gill
John V. Pearson
David Miller
Harpreet Wasan
Andrew V. Biankin
Venessa T. Chin
Adrienne Morey
Marina Pajic
Adnan Nagrial
Jianmin Wu
Karin S. Kassahn
Angela Chou
Elizabeth A. Musgrove
Amber L. Johns
Sean M. Grimmond
R. Scott Mead
Ann-Marie Patch
David K. Chang
Basic (bio-) Medical Sciences
Laboratory for Medical and Molecular Oncology
Source :
Genome Medicine
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Springer Verlag, 2013.

Abstract

Background:\ud Pancreatic cancer is one of the most lethal and molecularly diverse malignancies. Repurposing of therapeutics that target specific molecular mechanisms in different disease types offers potential for rapid improvements in outcome. Although HER2 amplification occurs in pancreatic cancer, it is inadequately characterized to exploit the potential of anti-HER2 therapies.\ud \ud Methods:\ud HER2 amplification was detected and further analyzed using multiple genomic sequencing approaches. Standardized reference laboratory assays defined HER2 amplification in a large cohort of patients (n = 469) with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC).\ud \ud Results:\ud An amplified inversion event (1 MB) was identified at the HER2 locus in a patient with PDAC. Using standardized laboratory assays, we established diagnostic criteria for HER2 amplification in PDAC, and observed a prevalence of 2%. Clinically, HER2- amplified PDAC was characterized by a lack of liver metastases, and a preponderance of lung and brain metastases. Excluding breast and gastric cancer, the incidence of HER2-amplified cancers in the USA is >22,000 per annum.\ud \ud Conclusions:\ud HER2 amplification occurs in 2% of PDAC, and has distinct features with implications for clinical practice. The molecular heterogeneity of PDAC implies that even an incidence of 2% represents an attractive target for anti-HER2 therapies, as options for PDAC are limited. Recruiting patients based on HER2 amplification, rather than organ of origin, could make trials of anti-HER2 therapies feasible in less common cancer types.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1756994X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....982c8cf9fbd1f2ca9005ddd6ff712fe6