Back to Search Start Over

Patterns of genomic change in residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy for estrogen receptor-positive and HER2-negative breast cancer.

Authors :
Chatzipli, Aikaterini
Bonnefoi, Hervé
MacGrogan, Gaetan
Sentis, Julie
Cameron, David
Poncet, Coralie
EORTC 10994/BIG 1-00 Consortium
Abadie-Lacourtoisie, Sophie
Bodmer, Alexandre
Brain, Etienne
Cufer, Tanja
Campone, Mario
Luporsi, Elisabeth
Moldovan, Cristian
Petit, Thierry
Piccart, Martine
Priou, Franck
Senkus, Elsbieta
Zaman, Khalil
Iggo, Richard
Source :
British Journal of Cancer; Nov2021, Vol. 125 Issue 10, p1356-1364, 9p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Treatment of patients with residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer is an unmet clinical need. We hypothesised that tumour subclones showing expansion in residual disease after chemotherapy would contain mutations conferring drug resistance.<bold>Methods: </bold>We studied oestrogen receptor and/or progesterone receptor-positive, HER2-negative tumours from 42 patients in the EORTC 10994/BIG 00-01 trial who failed to achieve a pathological complete response. Genes commonly mutated in breast cancer were sequenced in pre and post-treatment samples.<bold>Results: </bold>Oncogenic driver mutations were commonest in PIK3CA (38% of tumours), GATA3 (29%), CDH1 (17%), TP53 (17%) and CBFB (12%); and amplification was commonest for CCND1 (26% of tumours) and FGFR1 (26%). The variant allele fraction frequently changed after treatment, indicating that subclones had expanded and contracted, but there were changes in both directions for all of the commonly mutated genes.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>We found no evidence that expansion of clones containing recurrent oncogenic driver mutations is responsible for resistance to neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The persistence of classic oncogenic mutations in pathways for which targeted therapies are now available highlights their importance as drug targets in patients who have failed chemotherapy but provides no support for a direct role of driver oncogenes in resistance to chemotherapy. CLINICALTRIALS.GOV: EORTC 10994/BIG 1-00 Trial registration number NCT00017095. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00070920
Volume :
125
Issue :
10
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
British Journal of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153454707
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41416-021-01526-3