Abstract

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most common types of cancer in the world, and targeted therapy is frequently used in the clinical management of the disease. A complete and accurate picture of tissue gene mutations is therefore critical. Tissue specimens from 117 patients with CRC were used for high throughput DNA next-generation sequencing (NGS) analysis. Hotspots from 50 genes frequently associated with the development and progression of solid tumors were targeted for sequencing. Characterization of tissue gene mutations was performed; the tissue mutation positive rates of KRAS, KIT, PIK3CA, MET and EGFR were 52.1, 19.7, 29.9, 15.4 and 14.5%, respectively. The mutation positive rates of TP53, APC, CDKN2A, STK11 and FBXW7 were 65.8, 39.3, 32.5, 19.7 and 19.7%, respectively. The most frequent KRAS mutations were G12A/C/D/S/V, accounting for 61.2% of all KRAS mutations. The most frequent TP53 mutations were R273C/G/H/L, accounting for 8.5% of all TP53 mutations. The most frequent APC mutation was E1554fs, accounting for 19.7% of all APC mutations. IDH1 R132C/H, KIT M541L, MET N375S, and SMAD4 R361C/H were also frequently identified. TP53 mutations were more common in patients ≥60 years old (P<0.05), and IDH1 mutations were more common in male patients (P<0.05). NGS 50 gene panel sequencing provides a comprehensive tissue gene mutation profile which may significantly improve clinical management.

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