Ultra-mutated colorectal cancer patients with POLE driver mutations exhibit distinct clinical patterns.
Hanguang HuWen CaiDehao WuWangxiong HuLi Dong WangJianshan MaoShu ZhengWeiting GePublished in: Cancer medicine (2020)
POLE mutations, which lead to an ultramutated phenotype in colorectal cancer (CRC), have been reported as a promising marker in immunotherapy. We performed sequencing of CRC cases in Zhejiang University (ZJU) and extracted obtainable data from recently published results, including The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), Japanese studies and clinical trials, to present clinical patterns of POLE driver-mutated CRC and reveal its heterogeneity. The rate of somatic POLE driver mutations has been reported as 2.60% (ZJU cohort), 1.50% (TCGA cohort), 1.00% (Japan cohort), and 1.00% (Lancet cohort). POLE driver mutations show a clearly increased mutation burden (mean TMB: 217.98 mut/Mb in ZJU; 203.13 mut/Mb in TCGA). Based on pooled data, more than 70.00% of patients with POLE driver mutations were diagnosed before they were 55 years old and at an early disease stage (Stage 0-II >70.00%), and more than 70.00% were male. Among Asian patients, 68.40% developed POLE driver mutations in the left-side colon, whereas 64.00% of non-Asian patients developed them in the right-side colon (p < 0.01). The top three amino acid changes due to POLE driver mutations are P286R, V411L, and S459F. Investigators and physicians should ascertain the heterogeneity and clinical patterns of POLE driver mutations to be better equipped to design clinical trials and analyze the data.
Keyphrases
- peritoneal dialysis
- end stage renal disease
- clinical trial
- single cell
- randomized controlled trial
- electronic health record
- primary care
- big data
- amino acid
- genome wide
- squamous cell carcinoma
- ejection fraction
- risk factors
- newly diagnosed
- study protocol
- machine learning
- dna methylation
- prognostic factors
- papillary thyroid
- open label
- young adults
- patient reported