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Evolution and clinical impact of co-occurring genetic alterations in advanced-stage EGFR-mutant lung cancers.

Collin M BlakelyThomas B K WatkinsWei WuBeatrice GiniJacob J ChabonCaroline E McCoachNicholas McGranahanGareth A WilsonNicolai J BirkbakVictor R OlivasJulia RotowAshley MaynardVictoria WangMatthew A GubensKimberly C BanksRichard B LanmanAleah F CaulinJohn St JohnAnibal R CorderoPetros GiannikopoulosAndrew D SimmonsPhilip C MackDavid R GandaraHatim HusainRobert C DoebeleJonathan W RiessMaximillian DiehnCharles SwantonTrever G Bivona
Published in: Nature genetics (2017)
A widespread approach to modern cancer therapy is to identify a single oncogenic driver gene and target its mutant-protein product (for example, EGFR-inhibitor treatment in EGFR-mutant lung cancers). However, genetically driven resistance to targeted therapy limits patient survival. Through genomic analysis of 1,122 EGFR-mutant lung cancer cell-free DNA samples and whole-exome analysis of seven longitudinally collected tumor samples from a patient with EGFR-mutant lung cancer, we identified critical co-occurring oncogenic events present in most advanced-stage EGFR-mutant lung cancers. We defined new pathways limiting EGFR-inhibitor response, including WNT/β-catenin alterations and cell-cycle-gene (CDK4 and CDK6) mutations. Tumor genomic complexity increases with EGFR-inhibitor treatment, and co-occurring alterations in CTNNB1 and PIK3CA exhibit nonredundant functions that cooperatively promote tumor metastasis or limit EGFR-inhibitor response. This study calls for revisiting the prevailing single-gene driver-oncogene view and links clinical outcomes to co-occurring genetic alterations in patients with advanced-stage EGFR-mutant lung cancer.
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