Cancer Treatment and Research Communications (Jan 2021)

Somatic mutations in oral squamous cell carcinomas in 98 Japanese patients and their clinical implications

  • Yuko Osawa,
  • Ken-ichi Aoyama,
  • Kazuyoshi Hosomichi,
  • Masahiro Uchibori,
  • Atsushi Tajima,
  • Minoru Kimura,
  • Yoshihide Ota

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29
p. 100456

Abstract

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Introduction: The somatic mutational profile of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) among Japanese patients has been less investigated, partly because of the rarity of the tumor. Moreover, previous studies have either used formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples or lacked paired normal tissues. We aimed to determine somatic mutations in the exomes of 76 genes, including 50 driver genes of solid cancers and NOTCH-related genes, some of which are previously reported as frequently mutated in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma or OSCC. Materials and Methods: We used fresh-frozen tumor/normal-paired samples from 98 treatment-naïve Japanese patients with OSCC and analyzed their correlations with clinicopathological characteristics and survival. Results: We identified 136 exonic mutations, including 78 non-synonymous mutations, 13 synonymous mutations, 22 nonsense mutations, 2 non-frameshift deletions, 11 frameshift deletion, and 5 each of splice-site and frameshift insertions. The most frequently mutated genes were TP53 (36.7%), FAT1 (9.2%), NOTCH1 (8.2%), CDKN2A (7.1%), ZFHX4 (5.1%), CASP8 (4.1%), EP300 (4.1%), and KMT2D (4.1%). We followed up 90 of the 98 patients for 3 years. Among them, TP53 mutation was associated with significantly shorter 3-year disease-free survival. Most of the identified TP53 mutations occurred in the DNA-binding domain and were functionally deleterious. Discussion: Our findings and the mutation spectra can contribute to the development of a therapeutic strategy for Japanese patients with OSCC.

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