作者
Anna Li,Jin‐Ji Yang,Xu‐Chao Zhang,Zhou Zhang,Jian Su,Lan-ying Gou,Yu Bai,Qing Zhou,Zhenfan Yang,Han Han‐Zhang,Wen‐Zhao Zhong,Shannon Chuai,Qi Zhang,Zhi Xie,Hongfei Gao,Guangming Chen,Zhen Wang,Zheng Wang,Xue‐Ning Yang,Bin-Chao Wang,Bin Gan,Zhihong Chen,Ben‐Yuan Jiang,Si-Pei Wu,Si‐Yang Liu,Chong‐Rui Xu,Yi‐Long Wu
摘要
Purpose:MET amplification, responsible for 20% of acquired resistance to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), presents an attractive target. Numerous studies have conferred susceptibility of MET mutations and focal amplification to targeted MET-TKIs. However, the mechanism underlying MET-TKIs-induced resistance remains elusive.Experimental Design: We conducted a cohort of 12 patients with advanced NSCLC who developed resistance to a combinatorial therapy consisting of gefitinib and a type I MET-TKI. We performed capture-based targeted ultra-deep sequencing on serial tumor biopsies and plasmas ctDNA samples to detect and quantify genetic alterations.Results: We identified 2 newly acquired MET mutations, Y1248H and D1246N, in 2 patients and further confirmed their resistance against type I MET-TKIs in silco, in vitro, and in vivo Interestingly, NIH3T3 cells harboring either mutation exhibited responses to type II MET-TKIs, suggesting sequential use of MET-TKIs may offer a more durable response. In addition, we also discovered that EGFR amplification may act as an alternative MET-TKI resistance mechanism.Conclusions: Our study provides insight into the diversity of mechanisms underlying MET-TKI-induced resistance and highlights the potential of sequential use of MET-TKIs. Clin Cancer Res; 23(16); 4929-37. ©2017 AACR.