AI Article Synopsis

  • Many melanoma patients with BRAF mutations initially respond well to BRAF inhibitors like vemurafenib but often develop resistance over time.
  • A study on a patient who developed resistance revealed a new fusion gene that contributed to this resistance while still allowing sensitivity to MEK inhibitors.
  • The patient benefitted from a treatment combining BRAF and MEK inhibitors, and later biopsies showed the fusion gene was lost after discontinuing the inhibitors, highlighting the dynamic nature of melanoma cell evolution.

Article Abstract

Many patients with mutant melanoma treated with BRAF inhibitors experience a rapid response, but ultimately develop resistance. Insight into the mechanism of resistance is critical for development of more effective treatment strategies. Comprehensive genomic profiling of serial biopsies was performed in a patient with a mutant metastatic melanoma who developed resistance to vemurafenib. An fusion gene, identified in the vemurafenib-resistant tumor, was expressed in melanoma cell lines, and its effect on drug sensitivity was evaluated. Clinical resistance to vemurafenib in a melanoma harboring a mutation was associated with acquisition of an fusion gene. Expression of the fusion in mutant melanoma cells induced vemurafenib resistance; however, these cells remained relatively sensitive to MEK inhibitors. The patient experienced clinical benefit following treatment with the combination of a BRAF and a MEK inhibitor. Rebiopsy of the tumor at a later time point, after BRAF and MEK inhibitors had been discontinued, showed loss of the fusion gene. Mixing experiments suggest that cells harboring both and only have a fitness advantage over parental cells during active treatment with a BRAF inhibitor. We report acquisition of a fusion as a novel mechanism of acquired resistance to vemurafenib in a patient with melanoma harboring a mutation. The acquisition and regression of clones harboring this fusion during the presence and absence of a BRAF inhibitor are consistent with rapidly evolving clonal dynamics in melanoma. .

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-16-0758DOI Listing

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