Back to Search Start Over

Targeted Genomic Profiling of Acral Melanoma

Authors :
Eric Jorgenson
Maryam M. Asgari
Boris C. Bastian
Mengshu Xu
A. Hunter Shain
Andreas von Deimling
Iwei Yeh
Jeffrey P. North
David E. Reuss
William A. Robinson
Pui-Yan Kwok
Hong Wu
Adam B. Olshen
Ling Shen
Source :
Journal of the National Cancer Institute, vol 111, iss 10
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2019.

Abstract

Background Acral melanoma is a rare type of melanoma that affects world populations irrespective of skin color and has worse survival than other cutaneous melanomas. It has relatively few single nucleotide mutations without the UV signature of cutaneous melanomas, but instead has a genetic landscape characterized by structural rearrangements and amplifications. BRAF mutations are less common than in other cutaneous melanomas, and knowledge about alternative therapeutic targets is incomplete. Methods To identify alternative therapeutic targets, we performed targeted deep-sequencing on 122 acral melanomas. We confirmed the loss of the tumor suppressors p16 and NF1 by immunohistochemistry in select cases. Results In addition to BRAF (21.3%), NRAS (27.9%), and KIT (11.5%) mutations, we identified a broad array of MAPK pathway activating alterations, including fusions of BRAF (2.5%), NTRK3 (2.5%), ALK (0.8%), and PRKCA (0.8%), which can be targeted by available inhibitors. Inactivation of NF1 occurred in 18 cases (14.8%). Inactivation of the NF1 cooperating factor SPRED1 occurred in eight cases (6.6%) as an alternative mechanism of disrupting the negative regulation of RAS. Amplifications recurrently affected narrow loci containing PAK1 and GAB2 (n = 27, 22.1%), CDK4 (n = 27, 22.1%), CCND1 (n = 24, 19.7%), EP300 (n = 20, 16.4%), YAP1 (n = 15, 12.3%), MDM2 (n = 13, 10.7%), and TERT (n = 13, 10.7%) providing additional and possibly complementary therapeutic targets. Acral melanomas with BRAFV600E mutations harbored fewer genomic amplifications and were more common in patients with European ancestry. Conclusion Our findings support a new, molecularly based subclassification of acral melanoma with potential therapeutic implications: BRAFV600E mutant acral melanomas with characteristics similar to nonacral melanomas that could benefit from BRAF inhibitor therapy, and non-BRAFV600E mutant acral melanomas. Acral melanomas without BRAFV600E mutations harbor a broad array of therapeutically relevant alterations. Expanded molecular profiling would increase the detection of potentially targetable alterations for this subtype of acral melanoma.

Details

ISSN :
14602105 and 00278874
Volume :
111
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b3ff39c6206faf6717a23b61a2594708
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djz005