학술논문


Deep RNA Sequencing Revealed Fusion Junctional Heterogeneity May Predict Crizotinib Treatment Efficacy in ALK-Rearranged NSCLC
Document Type
Article
Source
In Journal of Thoracic Oncology February 2022 17(2):264-276
Subject
Language
ISSN
1556-0864
Abstract
Introduction Gene fusion variants in ALK-rearranged NSCLC may predict patient outcomes, but previous results have been inconclusive. Fusion isoforms coexisting in the same tumor may affect the efficacy of targeted therapy, but they have not been investigated.Methods Patients with ALK-rearranged NSCLC who received crizotinib treatments were recruited. Precrizotinib tumor tissues were analyzed by the anchored multiplex polymerase chain reaction for targeted RNA sequencing. Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression were used to compare overall and progression-free survivals.Results Of the 51 studied subjects, EML4-ALK variant types v1, v2, v3, and others were detected in 23 (45.1%), five (9.8%), 19 (37.3%), and four patients (7.8%), respectively. Multiple EML4-ALK RNA isoforms were detected in 24 tumors (47.1%), and single isoform in 27 (52.9%). Most of the v3 tumors (16 of 19) harbored both v3a and v3b RNA isoforms. Multiple isoforms were also detected in eight non-v3 tumors (33.3% of all 24 multiple isoforms; five v1, two v5′, and one v2). Compared with patients with single isoform, those with multiple isoforms had worse progression-free (hazard ratio and 95% confidence interval: 2.45 [1.06–5.69]) and overall (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval]: 3.74 [1.26–11.13]) survivals after adjusting for potential confounders including variant type. Using the patient-derived H2228 cells known to express v3a and v3b, our single-cell polymerase chain reaction detected either v3a or v3b in most single cells. Treatment of H2228 cells by three ALK inhibitors revealed increased ratios of v3a-to-v3b expression over time.Conclusions Intratumoral EML4-ALK isoforms may predict the efficacy of targeted therapy in ALK-rearranged NSCLC. Temporal changes of intratumoral fusion isoforms may result from differential selection pressures that a drug might have on one isoform over another. Larger studies on fusion heterogeneity using RNA sequencing are warranted.