Download PDF
Original Article  |  Open Access  |  18 Sep 2019

Genetic variations in triple-negative breast cancers undergoing neo-adjuvant chemotherapy

Views: 1744 |  Downloads: 1091 |  Cited:  0
Cancer Drug Resist 2019;2:877-84.
10.20517/cdr.2019.44 |  © The Author(s) 2019.
Author Information
Article Notes
Cite This Article

Abstract

Aim: Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is known as aggressive subtype and have no identified targeted therapies. We examined the relationship of neoadjuvant chemotherapy response to genetic variations of TNBC.

Methods: The tumors used in this study were collected from Showa University Hospital, Japan. Thirteen formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tumors from Japanese TNBC patients who underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy were used for analysis. Of these, eight surgically resected tumors showed progressive disease and/or recurrence after treatment (PD/REC), and biopsy tissues from five patients showing pathological complete response (pCR) were analyzed. DNA extracted from tissue sample were analyzed. The Miseq system and Trusight Tumor Sequence panel kit were used to sequence 174 amplicons over 82 exons of 26 cancer-related genes to identify genetic mutations.

Results: Seven somatic non-synonymous variants were detected in three genes (FOXL2, PIK3CA, and TP53) in all five pCR patients, and six somatic non-synonymous variants in two genes (PTEN and TP53) were detected in six of eight PD/REC patients. Eight of 13 TNBC tumors were found to have TP53 pathogenic variants, in both pCR and PD/REC cases.

Conclusion: Although TP53 variation was detected in both pCR and PD/REC cases, each location and type of the variant were different. We could not identify genetic mutations associated with chemotherapy response and recurrence.

Keywords

Triple negative breast cancer, next generation sequence, TP53 and neo adjuvant chemotherapy

Introduction

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is defined as any breast cancer lacking estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 expression. It accounts for approximately 15%-20% of all breast cancers[1,2]. TNBC is reported to behave more aggressively and is associated with a worse survival than other types of breast cancer[3,4]. Patients with TNBC have no identified targeted therapies. They are currently treated by surgery and chemotherapy alone[1].

Triple-negative subtypes are more sensitive to neo-adjuvant chemotherapy than luminal breast cancers[5-7]. Patients with TNBC have increased pathologic complete response (pCR) rates compared with non-TNBC patients, and those with pCR have excellent survival regardless of subtype[5-7]. However, patients with progressive disease after neo-adjuvant chemotherapy have a significantly worse prognosis if they have TNBC compared with other subtypes[5,7]. About 70%-80% of patients of TNBC fail to respond to neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC)[5-7], but the molecular mechanism underlying differences in responders and non-responders is unclear. It is also poorly understood which genes and pathways are related to treatment response in breast tumors.

Herein, we performed an exploratory study using next generation sequencing to investigate the dynamics of tumor gene mutations in TNBC patients receiving NAC.

Methods

Ethical approval

This study was approved (number 1589) by the Institutional Review Board of Showa University, Japan. Written informed consent was received from the patients. If informed consent could not be received for the death of patients, the candidate opted out on the homepage of the hospital.

Patient information

The tumors analyzed in this study were collected from Showa University Hospital, Japan. Ninety four patients revealed triple negative subtype of 1111 patients of primary breast cancer surgery between 2011 and 2013. Of these 94 patients, 33 underwent neo adjuvant chemotherapy prior to surgery. Ten patients achieved pCR and remaining 23 patients had residual disease. Four patients revealed clinically progressive disease during neo adjuvant chemotherapy. Taxane followed by anthracycline based regimens were applied as standard neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. Two patients who revealed progressive disease during first taxane regimen dropped out of neo-adjuvant chemotherapy then planned surgery without following anthracycline chemotherapy. Seven patients of 23 patients who had residual disease including 3 progressive disease revealed recurrence in the same period. In total, there were 8 patients with progressive disease and/or recurrence (PD/REC). Five of 10 pCR cases underwent pretreatment biopsy in Showa University Hospital and able to obtain the sample. These 8 PD/REC cases and 5 pCR cases were analyzed. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) samples from pretreatment biopsy of PD/REC and pCR cases and surgical specimen of PD/REC cases were obtained. Clinical and pathologic information was obtained from medical chart including the information of the results of both germline BRCA1/2 testing and BRNAness. The concept of “BRCAness” is that sporadic basal-like breast cancers resemble BRCA1 mutated cancers. A set of 34 MLPA probes was used to identify BRCAness[8]. American Joint Committee on Cancer/tumor-node-metastasis cancer staging was assessed.

Preparation of genomic DNA

Ten slices of 10 μm-thick FFPE tissues were used for genomic DNA extraction. Tissues were de-paraffinized with xylene, then DNA was extracted using the QIAamPD/recNA FFPE Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Venlo, Netherlands) following the manufacturer’s instructions.

Briefly, each deparaffinization solution, specific buffers and proteinase was added to destruct cells while centrifuging. After incubation, ethanol was added to precipitate DNA. After transferring the entire lysate to purification column, the centrifugation was repeated. Finally, elution buffer was added to elute DNA in the column.

Target genes

The TruSight Tumor Sequencing panel (Illumina, San Diego, California, USA, #FC-130-2001) was used to detect genetic variations in tumors using NGS. This panel covered 174 amplicons over 82 exons of 26 cancer-related genes. The following genes encode kinases: AKT1, ALK, BRAF, EGFR, ERBB2, FGFR2, KIT, MAP2K1, MET, PD/RECGFRA, PIK3CA, SRC, and STK11, while the remainder do not: APC, CDH1, CTNNB1, FBXW7, FOXL2, GNAQ, GNAS, KRAS, MSH6, NRAS, PTEN, SMAD4, and TP53.

Sequencing

The quality of the genomic DNA purified from FFPE tissues was checked by quantitative PCR using Quality Control Template (Illumina) and iQTM SYBR® Green Supermix (BioRad). Samples were required to fulfill the criteria ΔCt < 5, which was typically 30-300 ng depending on the DNA quality. However, ΔCt = 12 biopsy specimens were also included in the analysis. Genomic DNA hybridization-based enrichment was performed using the TruSight Tumor Sequence panel kit according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Pooled amplicons were end-repaired then underwent adapter ligation. The purified library was quantified using the Qubit® fluorometer with the Qubit® dsDNA BR assay kit. Finally, the captured DNA was subjected to 121-bp paired-end read sequencing on the MiSeq system (Illumina).

Strategies for the analysis of genetic variations

Sequence reads were exported into FASTQ format files. The alignment of pair-end sequencing reads to the reference genome was performed using a banded Smith-Waterman method with the Amplicon-DS workflow software plug-in for MiSeq Reporter. Human Genome version 19 (UCSC) was used as the alignment reference. The identification of sequencing variants was performed using the Illumina Somatic Variant Caller algorithm. The called SNPs/indels were annotated using COSMIC (somatic mutation information), the IARC TP53 database (human TP53 gene variations related to cancer)[9], and other databases of genetic variations. Database was aggregated into the Illumina VariantStudio application. Additionally, NM_000179.2:c.3254delC and NM_000179.2:c.3253_3254insC in MSH6 were eliminated as known artifact variants. Statistical analysis was performed with Fisher’s exact test.

Results

Clinical features of the patients

The clinical features of the patients are summarized in the Table 1. Patients had an average age of 49.6 years. Seven cases underwent BRCA1 and BRCA2 germline mutation testing. BRCA1/2 gene testing are not covered by national healthcare insurance, so it was performed to limited patients based on age, family history by self-pay. Seven PD/REC cases, including three patients with germline mutation showed BRCAness. One pCR case also showed BRCAness.

Table 1

Clinical features of the patients

pCRPD/REC
Age, year
   Median (range)56 (40-72)46 (27-68)
Clinical T-stage at diagnosis
   T110
   T227
   T321
   T400
Clinical N-stage at diagnosis
   N025
   N113
   N220
   N300
Stage at diagnosis
   I10
   II17
   III31
   IV00
Nuclear grade
   100
   213
   344
   Not available01
Ki-67
   < 20%00
   ≥ 20%57
   Not available01
Histology
   Ductal48
   Lobular00
   Others10
Subtype defined by IHC
   EGFR(+), CK5/6(+)02
   EGFR(+), CK5/6(-)01
   EGFR(-), CK5/6(+)11
   EGFR(-), CK5/6(-)23
   Not tested21
BRCA mutation
   Deleterious03
   Negative22
   Not tested33
BRCAness
   Yes17
   No10
   Not analyzed31
Neo-adjuvant treatment
   Anthracycline + Taxane46
   Taxane + Other02
   Other10
Surgery type
   Mastectomy16
   Lumpectomy42
   Sentinel Node Biopsy only24
   Axillary lymph node dissection34
Yeild of pathological T-stage
   T050
   T104
   T203
   T301
   T400
Yeild of pathological N-stage
   N054
   N104
   N200
   N300
Yeild of pathological stage
   I03
   II04
   III01
   IV00
Adjuvant treatment
   No54
   FEC01
   Gemcitabine + Carboplatin03
Recurrence
   Yes07
   No51
Radiation
   Yes44
   No14
Death
   Yes03
   No55
Average DFS (months)2517
Average observation period (months)3440

Genetic variations in tumors showed PD/REC and pCR

The genetic variations after filtering out synonymous variants and known artifacts are shown in the Table 2. Three biopsy samples of 8 PD/REC cases were not available for the analysis. In PD/REC cases, we found ten non-synonymous variants were detected in the coding regions of two genes in 5 biopsy tissues before NAC, while 14 non-synonymous variants were detected in the coding regions of three genes in 8 surgical specimens after NAC. In 5 pCR cases, ten non-synonymous variants were detected in the coding regions of four genes. Of these, variants TP53 Val31Ile and Pro72Arg, STK11 Phe354Leu, and MET Asn375Ser are known polymorphisms (NIH dbSNP: rs33917957, rs1042522, rs59912467 and rs33917957, respectively).

Table 2

Genetic vatiations detected in pCR/PD groups

Sample IDBiopsy samples before NACSurgical specimens after NAC
GenePathological variationsPolymorphismsGenePathological variationsPolymorphisms
Genetic variations in PD/REC patients
  6TP53      p.Val31IleTP53      p.Val31Ile
TP53      p.Pro72ArgTP53      p.Pro72Arg
STK11      p.Phe354LeuSTK11      p.Phe354Leu
  7TP53      p.Pro72ArgTP53      p.Pro72Arg
PTEN      p.Ser179Valfs*8
  8TP53      p.Val272Met      p.Pro72ArgTP53      p.Val272Met      p.Pro72Arg
  9n.a.TP53      p.Arg333Valfs*12
  10n.a.TP53      p.Pro72Arg
  11TP53      p.Cys275Trp      p.Pro72ArgTP53      p.Cys275Trp      p.Pro72Arg
  12n.a.TP53      p.Val216Met
  13TP53      p.Ile195Thr      p.Pro72ArgTP53      p.Ile195Thr      p.Pro72Arg
Genetic variations in pCR patients
  1TP53p.Leu111Phefs*40
  2TP53p.Val157Phep.Pro72Arg
Metp.Asn375Ser
  3TP53p.Cys141Tyrp.Pro72Arg
  4TP53p.Arg342*p.Pro72Arg
FOXL2p.Leu130Gln
  5PIK3CAp.Arg1023Glnfs*4

As a result, total of 3 somatic mutations in one gene (TP53) and six somatic mutations in two genes (TP53 and PTEN) were detected in biopsy samples (3/5 cases) and surgical specimens of PD/REC patients (6/8 cases), respectively. Somatic mutations were detected in three genes TP53, FOXL2 and PIK3CA in pCR patients (5/5 cases).

TP53 was the most frequently mutated gene (9 of 13, 69.2% in total, 5 of 8, 62.5% in PD/REC cases and 4 of 5, 80% in pCR cases) (P = 0.50). Other pathogenic variants detected at a lower frequency were in genes PIK3CA (n = 1), PTEN (n = 1) and FOXL2 (n = 1). In both PD/REC and CR, unique pathogenic variants were detected in TP53 and other genes. As shown in the Table 3, the TP53 Pro72Arg polymorphism was detected in both pCR and PD/REC cases.

Table 3

Genotype of the TP53 Pro72Arg polymorphism

Sample IDGenotypeAmino acidGenotypeRespose to chemothrapy
  1    C/C  Pro/Pro-                pCR
  2    C/G  Pro/ArgHeterozygote                pCR
  3    G/G  Arg/ArgHomozygote                pCR
  4    G/G  Arg/ArgHomozygote                pCR
  5    C/C  Pro/Pro-                pCR
  6    C/G  Pro/ArgHeterozygote                PD/REC
  7    C/G  Pro/ArgHeterozygote                PD/REC
  8    G/G  Arg/ArgHomozygote                PD/REC
  9    C/C  Pro/Pro-                PD/REC
  10    C/G  Pro/ArgHeterozygote                PD/REC
  11    G/G  Arg/ArgHomozygote                PD/REC
  12    C/C  Pro/Pro-                PD/REC
  13    C/C  Pro/Pro-                PD/REC

Next, we compared the effect of chemotherapy in five matched cases showed PD/REC. In patient 7, the PTEN Ser179Valfs*8 mutation was detected after NAC, but it was seen before NAC at low frequency on one strand (2%). Other genetic variations (TP53 and STK11) were observed both pre- and post-treatment.

Discussion

In this study, we used NGS to analyze 26 genes of 13 TNBC tumors receiving NAC. This is the first report to determine genetic variations in Japanese TNBC patients who showed pCR and PD/REC as a result of NAC. TP53 pathogenic variants were detected in both pCR and PD/REC cases at frequencies similar to the high rates previously reported. TP53 genetic variations in pCR cases might be associated with sensitivity to chemotherapy, and other TP53 variants in PD/REC cases might affect resistance to chemotherapy. Thus, sensitivity to chemotherapy may vary by the location and type of somatic TP53 variants. However, we could not confirm whether these genetic alterations found in this study were responsible for the chemo-sensitivity and recurrence because the number of patients are too small.

The numbers of genes and cases assessed were limited in this study. However, the frequency of genetic variations detected in TNBC did not differ greatly from those in previous studies. Lips et al.[10] analyzed 1977 genes in 56 pre-treatment TNBC biopsies of NAC responders and non-responders as well as matched normal DNA. They reported that most mutations were in TP53, TTN, and PIK3CA (55%, 14%, and 9%, respectively). No recurrent mutations were associated with chemotherapy response or relapse[10]. Balko et al.[11] examined residual disease in 74 clinically defined TNBCs after NAC, which included NGS performed on 20 matched pretreatment biopsies. Targeted NGS was carried out of 3320 exons from 182 oncogenes and tumor suppressors as well as 37 introns of 14 genes frequently rearranged in cancer. The frequency of each mutation was fewer than 5% of samples. Alterations in TP53 were identified in 72 of 81 samples (89%), which was a similar rate to that observed in other studies of basal-like breast cancer or TNBC, and The Cancer Genome Atlas dataset (~85%)[11]. Roy-Chowdhuri et al.[12] reported that a triple-negative group (n = 77) showed mutations in 15 of 46 genes tested, with TP53 showing the highest mutation frequency (n = 48/77, 62%), followed by PIK3CA (n = 13/77, 17%), APC, RET, SMAD4 (n = 2, 3%), AKT1, ATM, BRAF, FGFR1, HRAS, JAK3, MET, SRC, PTEN, and STK11 (n = 1, 1%)[12]. From these previous reports, it is difficult to conclude that the varied and sparse genetic alterations seen in the present study caused differences between responders and non-responders toward chemotherapy.

TP53 mutations in breast cancer have previously been reported to be associated with worse prognosis[13,14]. Ooe et al.[15] investigated the relationship between the p53 mutation status and response to docetaxel in breast cancers. They found that the response rate of patients with p53-mutated tumors (44%) was lower than that of those with wild-type tumors (62%). In addition, the TP53 p.Pro72Arg polymorphism was reported association with platinum-based chemotherapy response in non-small cell lung cancer[16]. Platinum-based chemotherapy was only administered to one case in our study, so no response difference was detected between heterozygous and homozygous variants in the pCR or PD/REC group. However, the same genetic variations of TP53 (p.V157F and p.Cys141Tyr) detected in PD/REC samples in previous study[11] were also observed in pCR samples in our study.

As a cohort, it is representative of Japanese TNBC, but the number of patients and samples was too low to confirm relevant relationship with genetic variants. This preliminary study should be followed up with a higher number of patients and selected genes in future.

In this study, 8 of 13 TNBC tumors were found to have TP53 pathogenic variants, in both pCR and PD/REC cases. TP53 variations were detected at similarly high rates as previously reported and may be associated with sensitivity or resistance to chemotherapy depending on the location and type of the variant. If the effect of these genetic variations on the induction of apoptosis could be determined, this might enable the mechanism of the NAC chemotherapy response to be understood. Our results provide insights into potentially actionable variants for targeted therapeutic options in TNBC.

Declarations

Authors’ contributions

Drafting of the manuscript, review and revisions of the final draft, data analysis and experiments: Mori M, Watanabe T, Makino R

Experiments: Ueda K, Hirota Y

Supervision, manuscript review and project administration: Akashi-Tanaka S, Nakamura S

Availability of data and materials

Not applicable.

Financial support and sponsorship

This work was supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid for the High-Technology Research Center Project from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan.

Conflicts of interest

All authors declared that there are no conflicts of interest.

Ethical approval and consent to participate

This study was approved (number 1589) by the Institutional Review Board of Showa University, Japan. Written informed consent was received from the patients. If informed consent could not be received for the death of patients, the candidate opted out on the homepage of the hospital.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2019.

REFERENCES

1. Iwase H, Kurebayashi J, Tsuda H, Ohta T, Kurosumi M, et al. Clinicopathological analyses of triple negative breast cancer using surveillance data from the registration committee of the Japanese Breast Cancer Society. Breast Cancer 2010;17:118-24.

2. Foulkes WD, Smith IE, Reis-Filho. Triple-negative breast cancer. N Engl J Med 2010;363:1938.

3. Dent R, Trudeau M, Pritchard KI, Hanna WM, Kahn HK, et al. Triple-negative breast cancer: clinical features and patterns of recurrence. Clin Cancer Res 2007;13:4429-34.

4. Lin NU, Vanderplas A, Hughes ME, Theriault RL, Edge SB, et al. Clinicopathologic features, patterns of recurrence, and survival among women with triple-negative breast cancer in the National Comprehensive Cancer Network. Cancer 2012;118:5463-72.

5. Luangdilok S, Samarnthai N, Korphaisarn K. Association between pathological complete response and outcome following neoadjuvant chemotherapy in locally advanced breast cancer patients. J Breast Cancer 2014;17:376-85.

6. Liedtke C, Mazouni C, Hess KR, André F, Tordai A, et al. Response to neoadjuvant therapy and long-term survival in patients with triple-negative breast cancer. J Clin Oncol 2008;26:1275-81.

7. Carey LA, Dees EC, Sawyer L, Gatti L, Moore DT, et al. The triple negative paradox: primary tumor chemosensitivity of breast cancer subtypes. Clin Cancer Res 2007;13:2329-34.

8. Lips EH, Laddach N, Savola SP, Vollebergh MA, Oonk AM, et al. Quantitative copy number analysis by Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification (MLPA) of BRCA1-associated breast cancer regions identifies BRCAness. Breast Cancer Res 2011;13:R107.

9. Petitjean A, Mathe E, Kato S, Ishioka C, Tavtigian SV, et al. Impact of mutant p53 functional properties on TP53 mutation patterns and tumor phenotype: lessons from recent developments in the IARC TP53 database. Hum Mutat 2007;28:622-9.

10. Lips EH, Michaut M, Hoogstraat M, Mulder L, Besselink NJ, et al. Next generation sequencing of triple negative breast cancer to find predictors for chemotherapy response. Breast Cancer Res 2015;17:134.

11. Balko JM, Giltnane JM, Wang K, Schwarz LJ, Young CD, et al. Molecular profiling of the residual disease of triple-negative breast cancers after neoadjuvant chemotherapy identifies actionable therapeutic targets. Cancer Discov 2014;4:232-45.

12. Roy-Chowdhuri S, de Melo Gagliato D, Routbort MJ, Patel KP, Singh RR, et al. Multigene clinical mutational profiling of breast carcinoma using next-generation sequencing. Am J Clin Pathol 2015;144:713-21.

13. Olivier M, Langerød A, Carrieri P, Bergh J, Klaar S, et al. The clinical value of TP53 gene mutations in 1794 patients with breast cancer. Clin Cancer Res 2006;12:1157-67.

14. Langerød A, Zhao H, Borgan Ø, Nesland JM, Bukholm IR, et al. TP53 mutation status and gene expression profiles are powerful powerful prognositic markers of breast cancer. Breast Cancer Res 2007;9:R30.

15. Ooe A, Kato K, Noguchi S. Possible involvement of CCT5, RGS3, and YKT6 genes up-regulated in p53-mutated tumors in resistance to docetaxel in human breast cancers. Breast Cancer Res Treat 2007;101:305-15.

16. Shiraishi K, Kohno T, Tanai C, Goto Y, Kuchiba A, et al. Association of DNA repair gene polymorphisms with response to platinum-based doublet chemotherapy in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer. J Clin Oncol 2010;28:4945-52.

Cite This Article

Original Article
Open Access
Genetic variations in triple-negative breast cancers undergoing neo-adjuvant chemotherapy
Miki Mori, ... Seigo Nakamura

How to Cite

Mori, M.; Watanabe T.; Akashi-Tanaka S.; Ueda K.; Makino R.; Hirota Y.; Nakamura S. Genetic variations in triple-negative breast cancers undergoing neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. Cancer. Drug. Resist. 2019, 2, 877-84. http://dx.doi.org/10.20517/cdr.2019.44

Download Citation

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click on download.

Export Citation File:

Type of Import

Tips on Downloading Citation

This feature enables you to download the bibliographic information (also called citation data, header data, or metadata) for the articles on our site.

Citation Manager File Format

Use the radio buttons to choose how to format the bibliographic data you're harvesting. Several citation manager formats are available, including EndNote and BibTex.

Type of Import

If you have citation management software installed on your computer your Web browser should be able to import metadata directly into your reference database.

Direct Import: When the Direct Import option is selected (the default state), a dialogue box will give you the option to Save or Open the downloaded citation data. Choosing Open will either launch your citation manager or give you a choice of applications with which to use the metadata. The Save option saves the file locally for later use.

Indirect Import: When the Indirect Import option is selected, the metadata is displayed and may be copied and pasted as needed.

About This Article

© The Author(s) 2019. Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, for any purpose, even commercially, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

Data & Comments

Data

Views
1744
Downloads
1091
Citations
0
Comments
0
0

Comments

Comments must be written in English. Spam, offensive content, impersonation, and private information will not be permitted. If any comment is reported and identified as inappropriate content by OAE staff, the comment will be removed without notice. If you have any queries or need any help, please contact us at support@oaepublish.com.

0
Download PDF
Share This Article
Scan the QR code for reading!
See Updates
Contents
Figures
Related
Cancer Drug Resistance
ISSN 2578-532X (Online)

Portico

All published articles will preserved here permanently:

https://www.portico.org/publishers/oae/

Portico

All published articles will preserved here permanently:

https://www.portico.org/publishers/oae/