2 resultados para MEK

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Lung cancer is an heterogeneous disease, with 1-2% of rare histology. New molecular profiling technologies, such as next generation sequencing (NGS), haverevolutionized the assessment of molecular alteration in clinical practice. We analyzed a cohort of 1408 NSCLC-A patients treated at the Sant'Orsola- Malpighi University Hospital from 2019 to 2021. This analysis was performed using the oncomine focus thermo fischer panel. Of them, 410 (29%) had rare alteration (RET 3%, NTRK 0,2%,FGFR1 2%, MET exon14 skipping 3%, BRAF V600 4%, ALK fusion EGFR exon 20 2%) and 36 (2%)had a uncommon mutation. We enrolled 7 RET- rearranged patients in CRETA and J2G-MC-JZJC clinical trials assessing respectively unselective and selective RET-inhibitors , another 7 patients tested positive for the BRAF V6006 mutation and have been enrolled in the Array clinical trial assessing a novel combination of anti-BRAF and anti-mek agents . Other molecular alterations found are KRAS (Gly12Cys), FGFR1-4 mutation, MET skipping ex14 mutations, respectively eligible for other ongoing open studies such as Amgen 20190009 comparing efficacy of sotorasib vs docetaxel, Fight-207 assessing activity of pemigatinib and CINC280J12201 assessing activity of the novel met inhibitor capmatinib. In 2018 we joined the CHANCE clinical trial,a multicenter study evaluating the efficacy and safety of atezolizumab in patients withrare lung cancer histologies where and 14 patients have been so far enrolled in the Bologna site. Our studies underline the need of tailored approach to NSCLC patients and our results showed that precision medicine is feasible and is an effective approach to cancer treatment.

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Cancers of unknown primary site (CUPs) are a rare group of metastatic tumours, with a frequency of 3-5%, with an overall survival of 6-10 month. The identification of tumour primary site is usually reached by a combination of diagnostic investigations and immunohistochemical testing of the tumour tissue. In CUP patients, these investigations are inconclusive. Since international guidelines for treatment are based on primary site indication, CUP treatment requires a blind approach. As a consequence, CUPs are usually empiric treated with poorly effective. In this study, we applied a set of microRNAs using EvaGreen-based Droplet Digital PCR in a retrospective and prospective collection of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue samples. We assessed miRNA expression of 155 samples including primary tumours (N=94), metastases of known origin (N=10) and metastases of unknown origin (N=50). Then, we applied the shrunken centroids predictive algorithm to obtain the CUP’s site(s)-of-origin. The molecular test was successfully applied to all CUP samples and provided a site-of-origin identification for all samples, potentially within a one-week time frame from sample inclusion. In the second part of the study we derived two CUP cell lines, and corresponding patient-derived xenografts (PDXs). CUP cell lines and PDXs underwent histological, molecular, and genomic characterization confirming the features of the original tumour. Tissues-of-origin prediction was obtained from the tumour microRNA expression profile and confirmed by single cell RNA sequencing. Genomic testing analysis identified FGFR2 amplification in both models. Drug-screening assays were performed to test the activity of FGFR2-targeting drug and the combination treatment with the MEK inhibitor trametinib, which proved to be synergic and exceptionally active, both in vitro and in vivo. In conclusion, our study demonstrated that miRNA expression profiling could be employed as diagnostic test. Then we successfully derived two CUP models from patients, used for therapy tests, bringing personalized therapy closer to CUP patients.