Abstract

Abstract Over the recent years significant knowledge has been accumulated on which drugs can be therapeutically beneficial for a given patient based on mutational profiling of their tumors using selected gene panels. Much less, however, is known under which conditions targeting of genes which are amplified could be beneficial. Apart from successfully targeting HER2-positive cancers, many of which frequently carry amplified ERBB2 gene, no other targeted therapy based on DNA amplifications or gains of the genes is offered to the patients due to lack of clinical response data. Using mate pair sequencing we have profiled 60 high grade serous ovarian tumors to compare genomic rearrangements and copy number changes. The analyses revealed that these tumors carry highly rearranged genome. Copy number changes amplifications, gains and losses were very common and included genes potentially therapeutically targetable. In contrast, only a few of targetable fusion genes were identified in a set of 60 cases. The tumors were propagated in immunocompromised mice (mouse avatars), sequenced and showed identical to original patient tumor landscape of rearrangements. Using these mouse avatar models we tested whether a therapy inhibiting selected based on genomic amplification targets provided a benefit compared to standard chemotherapy. Mice which harbored tumors showing amplifications of CDKs (CDK2, 4 and 9) and ERBB3 were treated with flavopiridol and pertuzumab respectively, and response was compared to that of standard for ovarian cancer chemotherapy (carboplatin and paclitaxel combination). We observed that application of either agent, significantly inhibited tumor growth in treated mice as compared to untreated. However, neither drug alone caused tumor regression. The treatment regimen then was modified to administer chemotherapy and targeted therapy together. A mouse avatars in which genomic analyses revealed amplification at loci involving AKT3 and RICTOR genes was treated with chemotherapy alone and in combination with MK2206 (AKT inhibitor) or MK8669 (mTOR inhibitor). The high level of both target proteins was confirmed by immunoblotting. Significant regression of tumor was observed after 6 weeks of treatment. Addition of either targeted drug provided an extra benefit in killing tumor cells compared to chemotherapy alone. The mice are followed to study tumor recurrence. These data indicated that genomic information obtained using next generation sequencing can aid therapy decisions by tailoring treatments to individual tumor makeup. Avatar models in conjunction with genomic analyses of the original tumors are invaluable for testing specific targeted therapies selected based on amplification/gains of putative genes-targets and for studying mechanisms of tumor recurrence and therapy resistance. Citation Format: Faye R. Harris, Lin Yang, Xiaonan Hou, Konstantinos Leventakos, Saravut J. Weroha, George Vasmatzis, Irina V. Kovtun. Targeting genes which are amplified in ovarian cancer. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Precision Medicine Series: Targeting the Vulnerabilities of Cancer; May 16-19, 2016; Miami, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Clin Cancer Res 2017;23(1_Suppl):Abstract nr A34.

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