Oncotarget

Research Papers:

Allele frequencies of BRAFV600 mutations in primary melanomas and matched metastases and their relevance for BRAF inhibitor therapy in metastatic melanoma

Imke Satzger _, Lena Marks, Martin Kerick, Sven Klages, Carola Berking, Rudolf Herbst, Bernward Völker, Vivien Schacht, Bernd Timmermann and Ralf Gutzmer

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Oncotarget. 2015; 6:37895-37905. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.5634

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Abstract

Imke Satzger1, Lena Marks1, Martin Kerick2, Sven Klages2, Carola Berking3, Rudolf Herbst4, Bernward Völker5, Vivien Schacht1, Bernd Timmermann2, Ralf Gutzmer1

1Department of Dermatology and Allergy, Skin Cancer Center Hannover, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany

2Sequencing Core Facility, Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Berlin, Germany

3Department of Dermatology, Ludwig-Maximilian University of Munich, Munich, Germany

4Department of Dermatology and Allergology, HELIOS Skin Cancer Center, Erfurt, Germany

5Institute of Pathology, Nordstadt Krankenhaus, Hannover, Germany

Correspondence to:

Imke Satzger, e-mail: [email protected]

Keywords: metastatic melanoma, primary melanoma, BRAFV600 mutation, BRAF inhibitor

Received: March 26, 2015     Accepted: October 06, 2015     Published: October 16, 2015

ABSTRACT

Background: The detection of BRAFV600 mutations in patients with metastatic melanoma is important because of the availability of BRAF inhibitor therapy. However, the clinical relevance of the frequency of BRAFV600 mutant alleles is unclear.

Patients and Methods: Allele frequencies of BRAFV600 mutations were analyzed by ultra-deep next-generation sequencing in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded melanoma tissue (75 primary melanomas and 88 matched metastases). In a second study, pretreatment specimens from 76 patients who received BRAF inhibitors were retrospectively analyzed, and BRAFV600 allele frequencies were correlated with therapeutic results.

Results: Thirty-five patients had concordantly BRAF-positive and 36 (48%) patients had concordantly BRAF-negative primary melanomas and matched metastases, and four patients had discordant samples with low allele frequencies (3.4–5.2%). Twenty-six of 35 patients with concordant samples had BRAFV600E mutations, three of whom had additional mutations (V600K in two patients and V600R in one) and nine patients had exclusively non-V600E mutations (V600K in eight patients and V600E -c.1799_1800TG > AA- in one patient). The frequency of mutated BRAFV600 alleles was similar in the primary melanoma and matched metastasis in 27/35 patients, but differed by >3-fold in 8/35 of samples. BRAFV600E allele frequencies in pretreatment tumor specimens were not significantly correlated with treatment outcomes in 76 patients with metastatic melanoma who were treated with BRAF inhibitors.

Conclusions: BRAFV600 mutation status and allele frequency is consistent in the majority of primary melanomas and matched metastases. A small subgroup of patients has double mutations. BRAFV600 allele frequencies are not correlated with the response to BRAF inhibitors.


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