Background
American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging for pancreatic adenocarcinoma is a validated predictor of prognosis but
insufficiently discriminates postresection survival. We hypothesized that genetic analysis of resected cancers would correlate
with tumor biology and postoperative survival.
Methods
Resected pancreatic ductal and ampullary adenocarcinomas (n = 50) were analyzed for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at 15 markers including 5q(APC), 6q(TBSP2), 9p(p16), 10q(PTEN), 12q(MDM2), 17p(TP53), and 18q(DCC/SMAD4). KRAS exon 1 mutations were detected by sequencing. The primary endpoint of this interim data analysis was survival at 18 month
median follow-up.
Results
Negative margins were achieved in 43 (86%) cases. AJCC stage was: Ia/b (3), IIa (16), IIb (31). KRAS mutations were detected in 31 cases (62%) and LOH in 26 (52%) with mean fractional allelic loss score 23 ± 16%. Median survival
was significantly shorter with LOH (15.2 months versus not reached; p = 0.021) and KRAS mutations (19.6 months versus not reached; p = 0.038). Combining KRAS mutation with LOH was a powerful negative predictor in Cox regression (HR = 10.6, p = 0.006). Stage, nodal and margin status
were not predictive of survival.
Conclusion
LOH and KRAS mutations indicate aggressive tumor biology and correlate strongly with survival in resected pancreatic ductal and ampullary
carcinomas. Genetic analysis may improve risk stratification in future clinical trials.
Keywords
KRAS
- Loss of heterozygosity - Pancreatic adenocarcinoma - Surgical resection
Presented at the Plenary Session of the 49th Annual Meeting of the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract, San Diego,
California, May 17 - 21, 2008
Support: Koch Regional Perfusion Center and the John F. Fortney Pancreatic Cancer Research Foundation