Methylthioadenosine phosphorylase genomic loss in advanced gastrointestinal cancers
Ngoi, Natalie Y.L. and Tang, Tin-Yun and Gaspar, Catia F. and Pavlick, Dean C. and Buchold, Gregory M. and Scholefield, Emma L. and Parimi, Vamsi and Huang, Richard S.P. and Janovitz, Tyler and Danziger, Natalie and Levy, Mia A. and Pant, Shubham and De Armas, Anaemy Danner and Kumpula, David and Ross, Jeffrey S. and Javle, Milind and Rodon Ahnert, Jordi (2024) Methylthioadenosine phosphorylase genomic loss in advanced gastrointestinal cancers. The Oncologist, 29 (6). pp. 493-503. ISSN 1549-490X (https://doi.org/10.1093/oncolo/oyae011)
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Abstract
Background One of the most common sporadic homozygous deletions in cancers is 9p21 loss, which includes the genes methylthioadenosine phosphorylase (MTAP), CDKN2A, and CDKN2B, and has been correlated with worsened outcomes and immunotherapy resistance. MTAP-loss is a developing drug target through synthetic lethality with MAT2A and PMRT5 inhibitors. The purpose of this study is to investigate the prevalence and genomic landscape of MTAP-loss in advanced gastrointestinal (GI) tumors and investigate its role as a prognostic biomarker. Materials and Methods We performed next-generation sequencing and comparative genomic and clinical analysis on an extensive cohort of 64 860 tumors comprising 5 GI cancers. We compared the clinical outcomes of patients with GI cancer harboring MTAP-loss and MTAP-intact tumors in a retrospective study. Results The prevalence of MTAP-loss in GI cancers is 8.30%. MTAP-loss was most prevalent in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) at 21.7% and least in colorectal carcinoma (CRC) at 1.1%. MTAP-loss tumors were more prevalent in East Asian patients with PDAC (4.4% vs 3.2%, P = .005) or intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (IHCC; 6.4% vs 4.3%, P = .036). Significant differences in the prevalence of potentially targetable genomic alterations (ATM, BRAF, BRCA2, ERBB2, IDH1, PIK3CA, and PTEN) were observed in MTAP-loss tumors and varied according to tumor type. MTAP-loss PDAC, IHCC, and CRC had a lower prevalence of microsatellite instability or elevated tumor mutational burden. Positive PD-L1 tumor cell expression was less frequent among MTAP-loss versus MTAP-intact IHCC tumors (23.2% vs 31.2%, P = .017). Conclusion In GI cancers, MTAP-loss occurs as part of 9p21 loss and has an overall prevalence of 8%. MTAP-loss occurs in 22% of PDAC, 15% of IHCC, 8.7% of gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma, 2.4% of hepatocellular carcinoma, and 1.1% of CRC and is not mutually exclusive with other targetable mutations.
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Item type: Article ID code: 89470 Dates: DateEventJune 2024Published8 February 2024Published Online15 January 2024Accepted10 July 2023SubmittedSubjects: Medicine > Internal medicine > Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer) Department: Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 05 Jun 2024 09:03 Last modified: 20 Nov 2024 01:28 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/89470