Cancer Medicine (Jul 2019)

Molecular characterization of colorectal cancer using whole‐exome sequencing in a Taiwanese population

  • Ya‐Sian Chang,
  • Chien‐Chin Lee,
  • Tao‐Wei Ke,
  • Chieh‐Min Chang,
  • Dy‐San Chao,
  • Hsi‐Yuan Huang,
  • Jan‐Gowth Chang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.2282
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 8
pp. 3738 – 3747

Abstract

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Abstract Next‐generation sequencing (NGS) technology is currently used to establish mutational profiles in many heterogeneous diseases. The aim of this study was to evaluate the mutational spectrum in Taiwanese patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) to help clinicians identify the best treatment method. Whole‐exome sequencing was conducted in 32 surgical tumor tissues from patients with CRC. DNA libraries were generated using the Illumina TruSeq DNA Exome, and sequencing was performed on the Illumina NextSeq 500 system. Variants were annotated and compared to those obtained from publicly available databases. The analysis revealed frequent mutations in APC (59.38%), TP53 (50%), RAS (28.13%), FBXW7 (18.75%), RAF (9.38%), PIK3CA (9.38%), SMAD4 (9.38%), and SOX9 (9.38%). A mutation in TCF7L2 was also detected, but at lower frequencies. Two or more mutations were found in 22 (68.75%) samples. The mutation rates for the WNT, P53, RTK‐RAS, TGF‐β, and PI3K pathways were 78.13%, 56.25%, 40.63%, 18.75%, and 15.63%, respectively. RTK‐RAS pathway mutations were correlated with tumor size (P = 0.028). We also discovered 23 novel mutations in NRAS, PIK3CA, SOX9, APC, SMAD4, MSH3, MSH4, PMS1 PMS2, AXIN2, ERBB2, PIK3R1, TGFBR2, and ATM that were not reported in the COSMIC, The Cancer Genome Atlas, and dbSNP databases. In summary, we report the mutational landscape of CRC in a Taiwanese population. NGS is a cost‐effective and time‐saving method, and we believe that NGS will help clinicians to treat CRC patients in the near future.

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