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. 1995 Apr;1(4):441-5.

Mutant K-ras oncogenes in colon cancers Do not predict Patient's chemotherapy response or survival

Affiliations
  • PMID: 9816002

Mutant K-ras oncogenes in colon cancers Do not predict Patient's chemotherapy response or survival

S Markowitz et al. Clin Cancer Res. 1995 Apr.

Abstract

One half of human colon cancers bear mutant c-K-ras oncogenes. Mutant K-ras oncogenes are associated with shortened survival in non-small cell lung cancers, and, in cell line models, with resistance to cis-platinum and to ionizing radiation. This study examines whether mutant K-ras alleles in colon cancer alter patients' response to chemotherapy or survival. We studied 37 patients who received chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil and leucovorin, Exon 1 of the c-K-ras gene was PCR amplified from DNA extracted from paraffin-embedded tumor blocks. The presence of mutant or wild-type c-K-ras alleles was determined by dideoxy sequencing of the PCR-amplified c-K-ras DNA. c-K-ras mutations at codons 12 or 13 were present in 19 and absent in 18 cases. Responses to chemotherapy were equally likely in patients with either wild-type or mutant c-K-ras, occurring in 28% of patients with wild-type ras and 32% of patients with mutant ras (P = 0.8). Survival was also indistinguishable among both groups. Median survival from diagnosis was 35 months for ras wild-type patients and 31 months for ras mutant patients (P = 0.96). Median survival from starting chemotherapy was 14 months for ras wild-type patients and 17 months for ras mutant patients (P = 0.26). Patients with colon cancers bearing either wild-type or mutant c-K-ras alleles are indistinguishable in overall survival and are equally likely to respond to 5-fluorouracil-based chemotherapy.

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