Background
Activating KRAS mutations are common in ovarian carcinomas of low histological grade,
less advanced clinical stage and mucinous histological subtype, and form part of the
distinct molecular alterations associated with type I tumors in the dualistic model
of ovarian carcinogenesis. Here, we investigated the occurrence, clinicopathological
correlates and prognostic significance of specific KRAS mutations in tumours from
153 epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) cases from a pooled, prospective cohort.
Methods
KRAS codon 12,13 and 61 mutations were analysed by pyrosequencing in tumours from
163 incident EOC cases in the Malmo Diet and Cancer Study and Malmo Preventive Project.
Associations of mutational status with clinicopathological and molecular characteristics
were assessed by Pearson Chi Square test. Ovarian cancer-specific survival (OCSS)
according to mutational status was explored by Kaplan-Meier analysis and Cox proportional
hazards modelling. KRAS-mutation status was also analysed in 28 concomitantly sampled
benign-appearing fallopian tubes.
Results
Seventeen (11.1%) EOC cases harboured mutations in the KRAS gene, all but one in codon
12, and one in codon 13. No KRAS mutations were found in codon 61 and all examined
fallopian tubes were KRAS wild-type. KRAS mutation was significantly associated with
lower grade (p = 0.001), mucinous histological subtype (p = <0.001) and progesterone
receptor expression (p = 0.035). Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed a significantly improved
OCSS for patients with KRAS-mutated compared to KRAS wild-type tumours (p = 0.015).
These associations were confirmed in unadjusted Cox regression analysis (HR = 2.51;
95% CI 1.17-5.42) but did not remain significant after adjustment for age, grade and
clinical stage. The beneficial prognostic impact of KRAS mutation was ony evident
in tumours of low-intermediate differentiation grade (p = 0.023), and in a less advanced clinical
stage (p = 0.014). Moreover, KRAS mutation was associated with a significantly improved
OCSS in the subgroup of endometroid carcinomas (p = 0.012).
Conclusions
The results from this study confirm previously demonstrated associations of KRAS mutations
with well-differentiated and mucinous ovarian carcinomas. Moreover, KRAS-mutated tumours
had a significantly improved survival in unadjusted, but not adjusted, analysis. A
finding that merits further study is the significant prognostic impact of KRAS mutation
in endometroid carcinomas, potentially indicating that response to Ras/Raf/MEK/ERK-targeting
therapies may differ by histological subtype. Virtual slides The virtual slide(s)
for this article can be found here: http://www.diagnosticpathology.diagnomx.eu/vs/1788330379100147
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