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Targetable BRAF and RAF1 Alterations in Advanced Pediatric Cancers

Authors :
V.A. Miller
Jeffrey S. Ross
Brian M. Alexander
James Haberberger
Rachel Squillace
Shakti H. Ramkissoon
Geoffrey Kannan
Eric Allan Severson
Andrew Rankin
David E. Kram
Jeffrey Knipstein
Stuart Cramer
Margaret Rosenzweig
Pratheesh Sathyan
Nicholas Britt
Alison Roos
Jo-Anne Vergilio
Rachel L. Erlich
Dean Pavlick
Adrienne Johnson
Siraj M. Ali
Prasanth Reddy
Source :
Oncologist
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

RAF family protein kinases signal through the MAPK pathway to orchestrate cellular proliferation, survival, and transformation. Identifying BRAF alterations in pediatric cancers is critically important as therapeutic agents targeting BRAF or MEK may be incorporated into the clinical management of these patients. In this study, we performed comprehensive genomic profiling on 3,633 pediatric cancer samples and identified a cohort of 221 (6.1%) cases with known or novel alterations in BRAF or RAF1 detected in extracranial solid tumors, brain tumors, or hematological malignancies. Eighty percent (176/221) of these tumors had a known-activating short variant (98, 55.7%), fusion (72, 40.9%), or insertion/deletion (6, 3.4%). Among BRAF altered cancers, the most common tumor types were brain tumors (74.4%), solid tumors (10.8%), hematological malignancies (9.1%), sarcomas (3.4%), and extracranial embryonal tumors (2.3%). RAF1 fusions containing intact RAF1 kinase domain (encoded by exons 10–17) were identified in seven tumors, including two novel fusions TMF1-RAF1 and SOX6-RAF1. Additionally, we highlight a subset of patients with brain tumor with positive clinical response to BRAF inhibitors, demonstrating the rationale for incorporating precision medicine into pediatric oncology. Implications for Practice Precision medicine has not yet gained a strong foothold in pediatric cancers. This study describes the landscape of BRAF and RAF1 genomic alterations across a diverse spectrum of pediatric cancers, primarily brain tumors, but also encompassing melanoma, sarcoma, several types of hematologic malignancy, and others. Given the availability of multiple U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved BRAF inhibitors, identification of these alterations may assist with treatment decision making, as described here in three cases of pediatric cancer.

Details

ISSN :
1549490X
Volume :
26
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The oncologist
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fc09339295f162673c49a98f97be8990