University of Washington Medical Center, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Box 356460, Seattle, WA, USA.
J Clin Oncol. 2011 Aug 1;29(22):3008-15. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2010.34.2980. Epub 2011 Jun 27.
Secondary somatic BRCA1/2 mutations may restore BRCA1/2 protein in hereditary ovarian carcinomas. In cell lines, BRCA2 restoration mediates resistance to platinum chemotherapy and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors. We assessed primary and recurrent BRCA1/2-mutated ovarian carcinomas to define the frequency of secondary mutations and correlate these changes with clinical outcomes.
Neoplastic cells were isolated with laser capture microdissection, and DNA was sequenced at the site of the known germline BRCA1/2 mutation. When secondary mutations were found that restored wild-type sequence, haplotyping was performed using single nucleotide polymorphisms in tumor and paired lymphocyte DNA to rule out retention of the wild-type allele.
There were 64 primary and 46 recurrent ovarian carcinomas assessed. Thirteen (28.3%) of 46 (95% CI, 17.3% to 42.6%) recurrent carcinomas had a secondary mutation compared with two (3.1%) of 64 (95% CI, 1.0% to 10.7%) primary carcinomas (P = .0003, Fisher's exact test). Twelve (46.2%) of 26 (95% CI, 28.7% to 64.7%) platinum-resistant recurrences had secondary mutations restoring BRCA1/2, compared with one (5.3%) of 19 (95% CI, 1.2% to 24.8%) platinum-sensitive recurrences (P = .003, Fisher's exact test). Six (66.7%) of nine (95% CI, 34.8% to 87.8%) women with prior breast carcinoma had a recurrent carcinoma with a secondary mutation, compared with six (17.1%) of 35 (95% CI, 8.2% to 32.8%) with no history of breast carcinoma (P = .007, Fisher's exact test).
Secondary somatic mutations that restore BRCA1/2 in carcinomas from women with germline BRCA1/2 mutations predict resistance to platinum chemotherapy and may also predict resistance to PARP inhibitors. These mutations were detectable only in ovarian carcinomas of women whom have had previous chemotherapy, either for ovarian or breast carcinoma.
继发性体细胞 BRCA1/2 突变可能会使遗传性卵巢癌中的 BRCA1/2 蛋白恢复正常。在细胞系中,BRCA2 的恢复介导了对铂类化疗和聚(ADP-核糖)聚合酶(PARP)抑制剂的耐药性。我们评估了原发性和复发性 BRCA1/2 突变的卵巢癌,以确定继发性突变的频率,并将这些变化与临床结果相关联。
利用激光捕获显微切割分离肿瘤细胞,对已知胚系 BRCA1/2 突变部位的 DNA 进行测序。当发现能恢复野生型序列的继发性突变时,利用肿瘤和配对淋巴细胞 DNA 中的单核苷酸多态性进行单倍型分析,以排除野生型等位基因的保留。
评估了 64 例原发性和 46 例复发性卵巢癌。与 64 例原发性卵巢癌中的 2 例(3.1%;95%CI,1.0% 至 10.7%)相比,46 例复发性卵巢癌中有 13 例(28.3%;95%CI,17.3% 至 42.6%)存在继发性突变(P =.0003,Fisher 精确检验)。与 19 例铂类敏感复发肿瘤中的 1 例(5.3%;95%CI,1.2% 至 24.8%)相比,26 例铂类耐药复发肿瘤中有 12 例(46.2%;95%CI,28.7% 至 64.7%)存在恢复 BRCA1/2 的继发性突变(P =.003,Fisher 精确检验)。与 35 例无乳腺癌病史的患者相比,9 例(95%CI,34.8% 至 87.8%)有乳腺癌病史的患者中有 6 例(66.7%)复发性肿瘤存在继发性突变(P =.007,Fisher 精确检验)。
在存在胚系 BRCA1/2 突变的女性的癌组织中发现的恢复 BRCA1/2 的继发性体细胞突变,预示着对铂类化疗的耐药性,也可能预示着对 PARP 抑制剂的耐药性。这些突变仅在接受过卵巢或乳腺癌化疗的女性的卵巢癌中检测到。