Tumor profiling of KRAS, BRAF, and NRAS gene mutations in patients with colorectal cancer: A Lebanese major center cohort study

Abstract

Background: In the era of precision medicine, treatment schemes for advanced Colorectal (CRC) disease include monoclonal antibodies which block the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) implicated in tumor proliferation, invasion, migration and neovascularization. Resistance to these agents has been correlated with activating downstream mutations in KRAS, BRAF and NRAS genes, among others, leading to constitutive activation of the EGFR axis bypassing EGFR blockade. The assessment of tumor RAS and BRAF mutational status has thus become standard clinical practice. While multiple investigations reported roughly mutations rates of 40% in KRAS, 7% in NRAS and 5–15 % in BRAF, numbers vary across different populations with limited data specifically from the Middle East. Methods: This is a retrospective observational Laboratory information system (LIS) chart review of all the patients with pathologically confirmed colorectal carcinoma (CRC) or metastatic CRC who underwent KRAS, NRAS and/or BRAF mutational analysis testing at the Molecular Diagnostics Laboratory of the American University of Beirut Medical Center (AUBMC) from January 2012 to December 2018, inclusive. Data retrieved included the results of mutation testing performed for KRAS, NRAS and BRAF genes, the age, gender, and tumor location for each patient. Analysis of the mutations was performed using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) hybridization StripAssay® (ViennaLab, Vienna, Austria). Results: 130 (47.6%) out of 273 histologically confirmed CRC cases, had positive KRAS mutations, namely in codons 12 (82%), 13 (17%), 146 (1.5%), 117 (0.75%), or 61 (0.75%). Two patients had two concomitant mutations: 12 + 12 (different mutations) and 12 + 146. Of 203 CRC cases tested for NRAS mutations, 16 (7.8%) were found to be positive for a mutation in codon 12 (37.5%), 61 (37.5%), or 13 (12.5%). Two patients had two concomitant mutations: 12 + 13 and 59 + 61. Of 172 CRC cases tested for BRAF mutations, 2 (1.2 %) were positive for the V600E -. Conclusion: This retrospective study is the first to report the frequencies of KRAS, NRAS and BRAF gene mutations in a Lebanese CRC cohort diagnosed and managed at a tertiary care center. The frequencies of the studied somatic gene mutations were similar to previously reported cohorts in other populations however the rate of BRAF mutation was lower in this cohort than expected. © 2022 Elsevier B.V.

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Braf, Cancer, Colon, Kras, Lebanon, Nras, Prevalence, Codon, Cohort studies, Colorectal neoplasms, Erbb receptors, Gtp phosphohydrolases, Humans, Membrane proteins, Mutation, Proto-oncogene proteins b-raf, Proto-oncogene proteins p21(ras), Retrospective studies, B raf kinase, K ras protein, Braf protein, human, Epidermal growth factor receptor, Guanosine triphosphatase, Kras protein, human, Membrane protein, Nras protein, human, Protein p21, Adult, Article, Braf gene, Cancer localization, Colorectal carcinoma, Cross-sectional study, Female, Gene amplification, Gene frequency, Gene mutation, Human, Lebanese, Major clinical study, Male, Metastatic colorectal cancer, Mutation rate, Mutational analysis, Observational study, Oncogene k ras, Oncogene n ras, Polymerase chain reaction, Protein fingerprinting, Retrospective study, Somatic mutation, Trend study, Cohort analysis, Colorectal tumor, Genetics, Metabolism, Pathology

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