Abstract

Melanoma is one of the most aggressive tumors of the skin, and its incidence is growing worldwide. Historically considered a drug resistant disease, since 2011 the therapeutic landscape of melanoma has radically changed. Indeed, the improved knowledge of the immune system and its interactions with the tumor, and the ever more thorough molecular characterization of the disease, has allowed the development of immunotherapy on the one hand, and molecular target therapies on the other. The increased availability of more performing technologies like Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS), and the availability of increasingly large genetic panels, allows the identification of several potential therapeutic targets. In light of this, numerous clinical and preclinical trials are ongoing, to identify new molecular targets. Here, we review the landscape of mutated non-BRAF skin melanoma, in light of recent data deriving from Whole-Exome Sequencing (WES) or Whole-Genome Sequencing (WGS) studies on melanoma cohorts for which information on the mutation rate of each gene was available, for a total of 10 NGS studies and 992 samples, focusing on available, or in experimentation, targeted therapies beyond those targeting mutated BRAF. Namely, we describe 33 established and candidate driver genes altered with frequency greater than 1.5%, and the current status of targeted therapy for each gene. Only 1.1% of the samples showed no coding mutations, whereas 30% showed at least one mutation in the RAS genes (mostly NRAS) and 70% showed mutations outside of the RAS genes, suggesting potential new roads for targeted therapy. Ongoing clinical trials are available for 33.3% of the most frequently altered genes.

Highlights

  • Cutaneous melanoma is one of the most aggressive malignancies of the skin

  • The better definition of the genetic mechanisms underlying melanomagenesis allowed to synthesize new molecular targeted drugs that radically changed the prognosis of melanoma patients

  • We collected mutation data on a total of 992 melanoma samples analyzed by Whole-Exome Sequencing (WES) or Whole-Genome Sequencing (WGS) to prove the genetic heterogeneity of melanoma, beyond the BRAF mutation

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Cutaneous melanoma is one of the most aggressive malignancies of the skin. Its incidence is globally growing partly due to the increase of early diagnoses, and contextually, the prevalence is increasing (Bray et al, 2018; Schadendorf et al, 2018). We provide a description of 33 selected established and candidate melanoma driver genes, as well as the mutational and CNV frequency of each gene (Figures 2, 3) in the melanoma samples analyzed, and we describe available, or in experimentation, targeted therapies for each gene/pathway, excluding immunotherapy Mutational frequency of these genes in melanoma across each study included in the review is displayed. The NRAS was the first oncogene identified in melanoma in 1984, and the second most prevalent after BRAF

49 NO 20 NO
12 NO 40 NO
24 NO 12 NO
96 NO 81 NO 146 NO
60 NO 4 NO 70 NO 18 NO 96 NO 27 NO
Findings
CONCLUSION AND PERSPECTIVES
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