Posts tagged Acquired Resistance
APOBEC3A drives acquired resistance to targeted therapies in non-small cell lung cancer

Acquired drug resistance to even the most effective anti-cancer targeted therapies remains an unsolved clinical problem. Although many drivers of acquired drug resistance have been identified, the underlying molecular mechanisms shaping tumor evolution during treatment are incompletely understood. The extent to which therapy actively drives tumor evolution by promoting mutagenic processes or simply provides the selective pressure necessary for the outgrowth of drug-resistant clones remains an open question. Here, we report that lung cancer targeted therapies commonly used in the clinic induce the expression of cytidine deaminase APOBEC3A (A3A), leading to sustained mutagenesis in drug-tolerant cancer cells persisting during therapy. Induction of A3A facilitated the formation of double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) in cycling drug-treated cells, and fully resistant clones that evolved from drug-tolerant intermediates exhibited an elevated burden of chromosomal aberrations such as copy number..... READ ARTICLE

BioRxIV DOI:10.1101/2021.01.20.426852

Authors: Hideko Isozaki, Ammal Abbasi, Naveed Nikpour, Adam Langenbucher, Wenjia Su,
Marcello Stanzione, Heidie Frisco Cabanos, Faria M. Siddiqui, Nicole Phan, Pégah Jalili,
Sunwoo Oh, Daria Timonina, Samantha Bilton, Maria Gomez-Caraballo, Hannah L.
Archibald, Varuna Nangia, Kristin Dionne, Amanda Riley, Matthew Lawlor, Mandeep Kaur Banwait, Rosemary G. Cobb, Lee Zou, Nicholas J. Dyson, Christopher J. Ott, Cyril
Benes, Gad Getz, Chang S. Chan, Alice T. Shaw, Jessica J. Lin, Lecia V. Sequist,
Zofia Piotrowska, Jeffrey A. Engelman, Jake June-Koo Lee, Yosef Maruvka, Rémi
Buisson, Michael S. Lawrence, Aaron N. Hata

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A Compound L1196M/G1202R ALK Mutation in a Patient with ALK-Positive Lung Cancer with Acquired Resistance to Brigatinib Also Confers Primary Resistance to Lorlatinib

We report here the case of a 70-year-old patient with ALK-positive NSCLC treated with crizotinib as part of the ALTA-1L trial.4 The patient relapsed after a partial response. After crizotinib failure, the patient was crossed over to brigatinib, which led to a second partial response lasting 9 months. After progression, the patient was shifted to lorlatinib but the clinical conditions worsened and the patient died. READ ARTICLE

Journal of Thoracic Oncology DOI:10.1016/j.jtho.2019.06.028

Authors: Geeta G. Sharma, Diego Cortinovis, Francesco Agustoni, Giulia Arosio, Matteo Villa, Nicoletta Cordani, Paolo Bidoli, William H. Bisson, Fabio Pagni, Rocco Piazza, Carlo Gambacorti-Passerini, Luca Mologni

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