Molecular Profiling of Gynecologic Cancers for Treatment and Management of Disease – Demonstrating Clinical Significance using the AMP/ASCO/CAP guidelines for interpretation and reporting of somatic variants

Publication date: Available online 14 January 2020Source: Cancer GeneticsAuthor(s): Qian Nie, Gregory Omerza, Harshpreet Chandok, Matthew Prego, Meng-Chang Hsiao, Bridgette Meyers, Andrew Hesse, Jasmina Uvalic, Melissa Soucy, Daniel Bergeron, Michael Peracchio, Shelbi Burns, Kevin Kelly, Shannon Rowe, Jens Rueter, Honey V ReddiAbstractMolecular features of gynecologic cancers have been investigated in comprehensive studies, but correlation of these molecular signatures with clinical significance for precision medicine is yet to be established. Towards this end, we evaluated 95 gynecologic cancer cases submitted for testing using The JAX ActionSeqâ„¢ NGS panel. Molecular profiles were studied and compared to TCGA datasets to identify similarities and distinguishing features among subtypes. We identified 146 unique clinically significant variants (Tier I and II) across 45 of the 212 genes (21%), in 87% (83/95) of cases. TP53, PTEN, ARID1A, PIK3CA and ATM were the most commonly mutated genes; CCNE1 and ERBB2 amplifications were the most frequently detected copy-number alterations. PARP inhibitors were among the most commonly reported drug class with clinical trials, consistent with the frequency of DNA damage-response pathway mutations in our cohort. Overall, our study provides additional insight into the molecular profiles of gynecologic cancers, highlighting regulatory pathways involved, raising the potential implications for targeted therapeutic options currently available.
Source: Cancer Genetics - Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: research