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Resistance Mechanisms to Anti-Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Therapy in RAS/RAF Wild-Type Colorectal Cancer Vary by Regimen and Line of Therapy

Authors :
Christine M. Parseghian
Ryan Sun
Melanie Woods
Stefania Napolitano
Hey Min Lee
Jumanah Alshenaifi
Jason Willis
Shakayla Nunez
Kanwal P. Raghav
Van K. Morris
John P. Shen
Madhulika Eluri
Alexey Sorokin
Preeti Kanikarla
Eduardo Vilar
Marko Rehn
Agnes Ang
Teresa Troiani
Scott Kopetz
Parseghian, Christine M
Sun, Ryan
Woods, Melanie
Napolitano, Stefania
Lee, Hey Min
Alshenaifi, Jumanah
Willis, Jason
Nunez, Shakayla
Raghav, Kanwal P
Morris, Van K
Shen, John P
Eluri, Madhulika
Sorokin, Alexey
Kanikarla, Preeti
Vilar, Eduardo
Rehn, Marko
Ang, Agne
Troiani, Teresa
Kopetz, Scott
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

PURPOSE Acquired resistance to anti–epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitor (EGFRi) therapy in colorectal cancer (CRC) has previously been explained by the model of acquiring new mutations in KRAS/NRAS/EGFR, among other MAPK-pathway members. However, this was primarily on the basis of single-agent EGFRi trials and little is known about the resistance mechanisms of EGFRi combined with effective cytotoxic chemotherapy in previously untreated patients. METHODS We analyzed paired plasma samples from patients with RAS/BRAF/EGFR wild-type metastatic CRC enrolled in three large randomized trials evaluating EGFRi in the first line in combination with chemotherapy and as a single agent in third line. The mutational signature of the alterations acquired with therapy was evaluated. CRC cell lines with resistance to cetuximab, infusional fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin, and SN38 were developed, and transcriptional changes profiled. RESULTS Patients whose tumors were treated with and responded to EGFRi alone were more likely to develop acquired mutations (46%) compared with those treated in combination with cytotoxic chemotherapy (9%). Furthermore, contrary to the generally accepted hypothesis of the clonal evolution of acquired resistance, we demonstrate that baseline resistant subclonal mutations rarely expanded to become clonal at progression, and most remained subclonal or disappeared. Consistent with this clinical finding, preclinical models with acquired resistance to either cetuximab or chemotherapy were cross-resistant to the alternate agents, with transcriptomic profiles consistent with epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. By contrast, commonly acquired resistance alterations in the MAPK pathway do not affect sensitivity to cytotoxic chemotherapy. CONCLUSION These findings support a model of resistance whereby transcriptomic mechanisms of resistance predominate in the presence of active cytotoxic chemotherapy combined with EGFRi, with a greater predominance of acquired MAPK mutations after single-agent EGFRi. The proposed model has implications for prospective studies evaluating EGFRi rechallenge strategies guided by acquired MAPK mutations, and highlights the need to address transcriptional mechanisms of resistance.

Subjects

Subjects :
Cancer Research
Oncology

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ad7568a1d1d032bae5d1f98af201f2d0