4.7 Article

Germline variant burden in multidrug resistance transporters is a therapy-specific predictor of survival in breast cancer patients

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 146, Issue 9, Pages 2475-2487

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.32898

Keywords

multidrug resistance; genetic variability; personalized medicine; population-specificity; rare variants; variant frequency; drug transport; chemotherapy; renal cancer; breast cancer; liver cancer

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [2016-01153, 2016-01154]
  2. Strategic Research Programme in Diabetes at Karolinska Institutet
  3. China Scholarship Council [201600160066]
  4. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program U-PGx [668353]
  5. Robert Bosch Foundation (Stuttgart, Germany)
  6. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy [EXC 2180 - 390900677]
  7. ICEPHA Graduate School Tuebingen-Stuttgart

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Multidrug resistance due to facilitated drug efflux mediated by ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters is a main cause for failure of cancer therapy. Genetic polymorphisms in ABC genes affect the disposition of chemotherapeutics and constitute important biomarkers for therapeutic response and toxicity. Here we correlated germline variability in ABC transporters with disease-specific survival (DSS) in 960 breast cancer (BRCA), 314 clear cell renal cell carcinoma and 325 hepatocellular carcinoma patients. We find that variant burden in ABCC1 is a strong predictor of DSS in BRCA patients, whereas candidate polymorphisms are not associated with DSS. This association is highly drug-specific for subgroups treated with the MRP1 substrates cyclophosphamide (log-rank p = 0.0011) and doxorubicin (log-rank p = 0.0088) independent of age and tumor stage, whereas no association was found in individuals treated with tamoxifen (log-rank p = 0.13). Structural mapping of significant variants revealed multiple variants at residues involved in protein stability, cofactor stabilization or substrate binding. Our results demonstrate that BRCA patients with high variant burden in ABCC1 are less prone to respond appropriately to pharmacological therapy with MRP1 substrates, thus incentivizing the consideration of genomic germline data for precision cancer medicine.

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