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Ampullary cancers harbor ELF3 tumor suppressor gene mutations and exhibit frequent WNT dysregulation

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posted on 2025-05-08, 18:16 authored by Marie-Claude Gingras, Kyle R. Covington, William E. Fisher, Christian Pilarsky, Robert Grützmann, Michael J. Overman, Nigel B. Jamieson, George Van Buren II, Jennifer Drummond, Kimberly Walker, Oliver A. Hampton, Australian Pancreatic Cancer Genome Initiative, David K. Chang, Rachel Wong, Lawrence A. Donehower, Anthony J. Gill, Michael M. Ittmann, Chad J. Creighton, Aamber L. Johns, Eve Shinbrot, Ninad Dewal
The ampulla of Vater is a complex cellular environment from which adenocarcinomas arise to form a group of histopathologically heterogenous tumors. To evaluate the molecular features of these tumors, 98 ampullary adenocarcinomas were evaluated and compared to 44 distal bile duct and 18 duodenal adenocarcinomas. Genomic analyses revealed mutations in the WNT signaling pathway among half of the patients and in all three adenocarcinomas irrespective of their origin and histological morphology. These tumors were characterized by a high frequency of inactivating mutations of ELF3, a high rate of microsatellite instability, and common focal deletions and amplifications, suggesting common attributes in the molecular pathogenesis are at play in these tumors. The high frequency of WNT pathway activating mutation, coupled with small-molecule inhibitors of β-catenin in clinical trials, suggests future treatment decisions for these patients may be guided by genomic analysis.

Funding

NHMRC

631701

535903

427601

History

Journal title

Cell Reports

Volume

14

Issue

4

Pagination

907-919

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Amsterdam, Netherlands

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health and Medicine

School

School of Medicine and Public Health

Rights statement

This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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