1. Super multiple primary lung cancers harbor high-frequency BRAF and low-frequency EGFR mutations in the MAPK pathway
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Haochen Li, Zhicheng Huang, Chao Guo, Yadong Wang, Bowen Li, Sha Wang, Na Bai, Hanlin Chen, Jianchao Xue, Daoyun Wang, Zhibo Zheng, Zhongxing Bing, Yang Song, Yuan Xu, Guanghua Huang, Xiaoqing Yu, Ruirui Li, Ka Luk Fung, Ji Li, Lan Song, Ziwei Zhu, Songtao Liu, Naixin Liang, and Shanqing Li
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract The incidence of multiple primary lung cancer (MPLC) is increasing, with some of our surgical patients exhibiting numerous lesions. We defined lung cancer with five or more primary lesions as super MPLCs. Elucidating the genomic characteristics of this special MPLC subtype can help reduce disease burden and understand tumor evolution. In our cohort of synchronous super early-stage MPLCs (PUMCH-ssesMPLC), whole-exome sequencing on 130 resected malignant specimens from 18 patients provided comprehensive super-MPLC genomic landscapes. Mutations are enriched in PI3k-Akt and MAPK pathways. Their BRAF mutation frequency (31.5%) is significantly higher than MPLC with fewer lesions and early-stage single-lesion cancer, while EGFR mutations are significantly fewer (13.8%). As lesion counts increase, BRAF mutations gradually become dominant. Also, invasive lesions more tend to have classic super-MPLC mutation patterns. High-frequency BRAF mutations, especially Class II, and low-frequency EGFR mutations could be a reason for the limited effectiveness of targeted therapy in super-MPLC patients.
- Published
- 2024
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