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La Fleur, Linnéa; Falk-Sörqvist, Elin; Smeds, Patrik; Berglund, Anders; Sundström, Magnus; Mattsson, Johanna SM; Brandén, Eva; Koyi, Hirsh; Isaksson, Johan; Brunnström, Hans; Nilsson, Mats; Micke, Patrick; Moens, Lotte; Botling, Johan
Lung cancer (Amsterdam, Netherlands), 04/2019, Volume: 130Journal Article
•No technical bias between fresh frozen and FFPE samples.•A high fraction of adenocarcinoma patients with activating KRAS mutations.•Mutations in TP53, STK11 and SMARCA4 linked to poor prognosis in adenocarcinoma.•Mutations in CSMD3 linked to better prognosis in squamous cell carcinoma.•Co-mutations in TP53 or STK11 confer poor prognosis in KRAS positive patients. Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is a heterogeneous disease with unique combinations of somatic molecular alterations in individual patients, as well as significant differences in populations across the world with regard to mutation spectra and mutation frequencies. Here we aim to describe mutational patterns and linked clinical parameters in a population-based NSCLC cohort. Using targeted resequencing the mutational status of 82 genes was evaluated in a consecutive Swedish surgical NSCLC cohort, consisting of 352 patient samples from either fresh frozen or formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissues. The panel covers all exons of the 82 genes and utilizes reduced target fragment length and two-strand capture making it compatible with degraded FFPE samples. We obtained a uniform sequencing coverage and mutation load across the fresh frozen and FFPE samples by adaption of sequencing depth and bioinformatic pipeline, thereby avoiding a technical bias between these two sample types. At large, the mutation frequencies resembled the frequencies seen in other western populations, except for a high frequency of KRAS hotspot mutations (43%) in adenocarcinoma patients. Worse overall survival was observed for adenocarcinoma patients with a mutation in either TP53, STK11 or SMARCA4. In the adenocarcinoma KRAS-mutated group poor survival appeared to be linked to concomitant TP53 or STK11 mutations, and not to KRAS mutation as a single aberration. Similar results were seen in the analysis of publicly available data from the cBioPortal. In squamous cell carcinoma a worse prognosis could be observed for patients with MLL2 mutations, while CSMD3 mutations were linked to a better prognosis. Here we have evaluated the mutational status of a NSCLC cohort. We could not confirm any survival impact of isolated driver mutations. Instead, concurrent mutations in TP53 and STK11 were shown to confer poor survival in the KRAS-positive adenocarcinoma subgroup.
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