The Prognostic Utility of KRAS Mutations in Tissue and Circulating Tumour DNA in Colorectal Cancer Patients

Author:

Petit Joel123,Carroll Georgia134,Zhao Jie1,Pockney Peter23,Scott Rodney J.235ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Surgery, John Hunter Hospital, New Lambton Heights, NSW 2305, Australia

2. School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy, University of Newcastle, New Lambton Heights, NSW 2305, Australia

3. Hunter Medical Research Institute, University of Newcastle, New Lambton Heights, NSW 2305, Australia

4. School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, New Lambton Heights, NSW 2305, Australia

5. NSW Health Pathology, New Lambton Heights, NSW 2305, Australia

Abstract

This study aims to investigate the long-term prognostic utility of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) KRAS mutations in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients and compare this with KRAS mutations in matched tissue samples. Tumour tissue (n = 107) and ctDNA (n = 80) were obtained from patients undergoing CRC resection and were analysed for KRAS mutations. The associations between KRAS mutation and overall survival (OS), cancer-specific survival (CSS), and recurrence-free survival (RFS) were analysed. All outcomes were measured in years (y). A total of 28.8% of patients had KRAS mutations in ctDNA and 72.9% in tumour tissue DNA. The high frequency of KRAS mutations in tissue samples was due to 51.4% of these being a detectable low mutation allele frequency (<10% MAF). Comparing KRAS mutant (KRASmut) to KRAS wild-type (KRASwt) in ctDNA, there was no association found with OS (mean 4.67 y vs. 4.34 y, p = 0.832), CSS (mean 4.72 y vs. 4.49 y, p = 0.747), or RFS (mean 3.89 y vs. 4.26 y, p = 0.616). Similarly, comparing KRASmut to KRASwt in tissue DNA there was no association found with OS (mean 4.23 y vs. 4.61 y, p = 0.193), CSS (mean 4.41 y vs. 4.71 y, p = 0.312), or RFS (mean 4.16 y vs. 4.41 y, p = 0.443). There was no significant association found between KRAS mutations in either tissue or ctDNA and OS, CSS, or RFS.

Funder

University of Newcastle RHD stipend

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Gastroenterology,Hepatology

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