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Intrinsic Subtype Switching and Acquired ERBB2/HER2 Amplifications and Mutations in Breast Cancer Brain Metastases

Authors :
Juliann Chmielecki
Roby Antony Thomas
Adam Brufsky
Ryan J. Hartmaier
Rohit Bhargava
Damir Varešlija
Steffi Oesterreich
Ronald L. Hamilton
Ahmed Basudan
Rebecca J. Watters
Yijing Chen
Nolan Priedigkeit
Peter C. Lucas
Leonie S. Young
Nancy E. Davidson
Jose Pablo Leone
Shannon Puhalla
Adrian V. Lee
Source :
JAMA oncology. 3(5)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Importance Patients with breast cancer (BrCa) brain metastases (BrM) have limited therapeutic options. A better understanding of molecular alterations acquired in BrM could identify clinically actionable metastatic dependencies. Objective To determine whether there are intrinsic subtype differences between primary tumors and matched BrM and to uncover BrM-acquired alterations that are clinically actionable. Design, Setting, and Participants In total, 20 cases of primary breast cancer tissue and resected BrM (10 estrogen receptor [ER]-negative and 10 ER-positive) from 2 academic institutions were included. Eligible cases in the discovery cohort harbored patient-matched primary breast cancer tissue and resected BrM. Given the rarity of patient-matched samples, no exclusion criteria were enacted. Two validation sequencing cohorts were used—a published data set of 17 patient-matched cases of BrM and a cohort of 7884 BrCa tumors enriched for metastatic samples. Main Outcomes and Measures Brain metastases expression changes in 127 genes within BrCa signatures, PAM50 assignments, and ERBB2 / HER2 DNA-level gains. Results Overall, 17 of 20 BrM retained the PAM50 subtype of the primary BrCa. Despite this concordance, 17 of 20 BrM harbored expression changes ( 2-fold) in clinically actionable genes including gains of FGFR4 (n = 6 [30%]), FLT1 (n = 4 [20%]), AURKA (n = 2 [10%]) and loss of ESR1 expression (n = 9 [45%]). The most recurrent expression gain was ERBB2 / HER2, which showed a greater than 2-fold expression increase in 7 of 20 BrM (35%). Three of these 7 cases were ERBB2/HER2-negative out of 13 ERBB2/HER2-negative in the primary BrCa cohort and became immunohistochemical positive (3+) in the paired BrM with metastasis-specific amplification of the ERBB2 / HER2 locus. In an independent data set, 2 of 9 (22.2%) ERBB2/HER2-negative BrCa switched to ERBB2/HER2-positive with 1 BrM acquiring ERBB2 / HER2 amplification and the other showing metastatic enrichment of the activating V777L ERBB2 / HER2 mutation. An expanded cohort revealed that ERBB2 / HER2 amplification and/or mutation frequency was unchanged between local disease and metastases across all sites; however, a significant enrichment was appreciated for BrM (13% local vs 24% BrM; P Conclusions and Relevance Breast cancer BrM commonly acquire alterations in clinically actionable genes, with metastasis-acquired ERBB2 / HER2 alterations in approximately 20% of ERBB2/HER2-negative cases. These observations have immediate clinical implications for patients with ERBB2/HER2–negative breast cancer and support comprehensive profiling of metastases to inform clinical care.

Details

ISSN :
23742445
Volume :
3
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....de3fdef4c4d5db2c910a498c5bc463ae