Abstract

BackgroundEarly onset colorectal cancer (EO CRC) is a heterogeneous colorectal cancer subtype with obvious hereditary tendencies and increasing incidence. We sought to determine the susceptibility genes and molecular characteristics of EO CRC.Methods330 EO metastatic CRC (mCRC) (≤55 years) and 110 average-onset (AO) mCRC patients (>55 years) were enrolled. Capture-based targeted sequencing was performed on tumor tissue and paired white blood cells using a sequencing panel of 520 genes. The association between molecular alterations and overall survival (OS) was analyzed.ResultsOf the 330 EO mCRC patients, 31 carried pathogenic or likely pathogenic germline mutations, with 16 of them diagnosed with lynch syndrome. Fifteen patients had germline mutations in non-mismatch repair genes, including four in MUTHY, three in RAD50, one in TP53, and eight in other genes. Twenty-nine genes were recurrently mutated in EO mCRC, including TP53, APC, KRAS, SMAD4, and BRCA2. The majority of genomic alterations were comparable between EO and AO mCRC. EO mCRC patients were more likely to have a high tumor mutation burden (p < 0.05). RNF43, RBM10, TSC, and BRAF V600E mutations were more commonly observed in EO mCRC, while APC, ASXL1, DNMT3B, and MET genes were more commonly altered in AO patients. At the pathway level, the WNT pathway was the only differentially mutated pathway between EO and AO mCRC (p < 0.0001). The wild-type WNT pathway (p = 0.0017) and mutated TGF-β pathway (p = 0.023) were associated with unfavorable OS in EO mCRC.ConclusionsApproximately one in 10 EO mCRC was associated with hereditary tumors. The spectrum of somatic alterations was largely comparable between EO and AO mCRC with several notable differences.

Highlights

  • Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the fourth most common malignancy and the second leading cause of tumor-related death worldwide [1]

  • Previous studies have shown that early onset colorectal cancer (EO CRC) is often associated with a later stage at presentation, signet ring histology, distal primary tumors, unfavorable prognosis, and strong inherited predisposition compared with average onset colorectal cancer (AO CRC), suggesting that EO CRC might be a distinctive subtype of colorectal cancer [7, 8]

  • The germline mutations in cancer susceptibility genes were less commonly seen in our cohort compared with previous studies of EO CRC, which may have partly resulted from racial differences and the late-stage cases chosen for

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Summary

Introduction

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the fourth most common malignancy and the second leading cause of tumor-related death worldwide [1]. The incidence and mortality of colorectal cancer have declined globally due to the implementation of routine screening and the advancement of precise treatments [4]. The age-specific incidence rate among population aged less than 55 years is increasing annually since mid-1990s [5]. Mortality rates of colorectal cancer patients aged 20 to 54 years increased by 1.0% annually from 2004 to 2014 [6]. Onset colorectal cancer (EO CRC) is a heterogeneous colorectal cancer subtype with obvious hereditary tendencies and increasing incidence. We sought to determine the susceptibility genes and molecular characteristics of EO CRC

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