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Advanced prostate cancer with ATM Loss: PARP and ATR inhibitors

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Title: Advanced prostate cancer with ATM Loss: PARP and ATR inhibitors
Authors: Neeb, A
Herranz, N
Arce-Gallego, S
Miranda, S
Buroni, L
Yuan, W
Athie, A
Casals, T
Carmichael, J
Rodrigues, DN
Gurel, B
Rescigno, P
Rekowski, J
Welti, J
Riisnaes, R
Gil, V
Ning, J
Wagner, V
Casanova-Salas, I
Cordoba, S
Castro, N
Fenor de la Maza, MD
Seed, G
Chandran, K
Ferreira, A
Figueiredo, I
Bertan, C
Bianchini, D
Aversa, C
Paschalis, A
Gonzalez, M
Morales-Barrera, R
Suarez, C
Carles, J
Swain, A
Sharp, A
Gil, J
Serra, V
Lord, C
Carreira, S
Mateo, J
De Bono, JS
Item Type: Journal Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Deleterious ATM alterations are found in metastatic prostate cancer (PC); PARP inhibition has antitumour activity against this subset, but only some ATM loss PCs respond. OBJECTIVE: To characterise ATM-deficient lethal PC and to study synthetic lethal therapeutic strategies for this subset. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We studied advanced PC biopsies using validated immunohistochemical (IHC) and next-generation sequencing (NGS) assays. In vitro cell line models modified using CRISPR-Cas9 to impair ATM function were generated and used in drug-sensitivity and functional assays, with validation in a patient-derived model. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: ATM expression by IHC was correlated with clinical outcome using Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank test; sensitivity to different drug combinations was assessed in the preclinical models. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS: Overall, we detected ATM IHC loss in 68/631 (11%) PC patients in at least one biopsy, with synchronous and metachronous intrapatient heterogeneity; 46/71 (65%) biopsies with ATM loss had ATM mutations or deletions by NGS. ATM IHC loss was not associated with worse outcome from advanced disease, but ATM loss was associated with increased genomic instability (NtAI:number of subchromosomal regions with allelic imbalance extending to the telomere, p = 0.005; large-scale transitions, p = 0.05). In vitro, ATM loss PC models were sensitive to ATR inhibition, but had variable sensitivity to PARP inhibition; superior antitumour activity was seen with combined PARP and ATR inhibition in these models. CONCLUSIONS: ATM loss in PC is not always detected by targeted NGS, associates with genomic instability, and is most sensitive to combined ATR and PARP inhibition. PATIENT SUMMARY: Of aggressive prostate cancers, 10% lose the DNA repair gene ATM; this loss may identify a distinct prostate cancer subtype that is most sensitive to the combination of oral drugs targeting PARP and ATR.
Issue Date: 1-Feb-2021
Date of Acceptance: 18-Oct-2020
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/84869
DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2020.10.029
ISSN: 0302-2838
Publisher: Elsevier
Start Page: 200
End Page: 211
Journal / Book Title: European Urology
Volume: 79
Issue: 2
Copyright Statement: © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of European Association of Urology. This is an open access articleunder the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Urology & Nephrology
Prostate cancer
ATM
DNA damage response
Synthetic lethality
PARP inhibition
ATR inhibition
DNA-REPAIR
OLAPARIB
ATM
ATR inhibition
DNA damage response
PARP inhibition
Prostate cancer
Synthetic lethality
ATM
ATR inhibition
DNA damage response
PARP inhibition
Prostate cancer
Synthetic lethality
Urology & Nephrology
1103 Clinical Sciences
Publication Status: Published
Conference Place: Switzerland
Online Publication Date: 2020-11-08
Appears in Collections:Institute of Clinical Sciences
Faculty of Medicine



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