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DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3002543
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Recurrent <i>GNAS</i> Mutations Define an Unexpected Pathway for Pancreatic Cyst Development

Jian Wu,Hanno Matthaei,Anirban Maitra,Marco Dal Molin,Laura D. Wood,James R. Eshleman,Michael Goggins,Marcia Irene Canto,Richard D. Schulick,Barish H. Edil,Christopher L. Wolfgang,Alison P. Klein,Luis A. Díaz,Peter J. Allen,C. Max Schmidt,Kenneth W. Kinzler,Nickolas Papadopoulos,Ralph H. Hruban,Bert Vogelstein

GNAS complex locus
KRAS
Cyst
2011
More than 2% of the adult U.S. population harbors a pancreatic cyst. These often pose a difficult management problem because conventional criteria cannot always distinguish cysts with malignant potential from those that are innocuous. One of the most common cystic neoplasms of the pancreas, and a bona fide precursor to invasive adenocarcinoma, is called intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN). To help reveal the pathogenesis of these lesions, we purified the DNA from IPMN cyst fluids from 19 patients and searched for mutations in 169 genes commonly altered in human cancers. In addition to the expected KRAS mutations, we identified recurrent mutations at codon 201 of GNAS. A larger number (113) of additional IPMNs were then analyzed to determine the prevalence of KRAS and GNAS mutations. In total, we found that GNAS mutations were present in 66% of IPMNs and that either KRAS or GNAS mutations could be identified in 96%. In eight cases, we could investigate invasive adenocarcinomas that developed in association with IPMNs containing GNAS mutations. In seven of these eight cases, the GNAS mutations present in the IPMNs were also found in the invasive lesion. GNAS mutations were not found in other types of cystic neoplasms of the pancreas or in invasive adenocarcinomas not associated with IPMNs. In addition to defining a new pathway for pancreatic neoplasia, these data suggest that GNAS mutations can inform the diagnosis and management of patients with cystic pancreatic lesions.
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    Recurrent <i>GNAS</i> Mutations Define an Unexpected Pathway for Pancreatic Cyst Development” is a paper by Jian Wu Hanno Matthaei Anirban Maitra Marco Dal Molin Laura D. Wood James R. Eshleman Michael Goggins Marcia Irene Canto Richard D. Schulick Barish H. Edil Christopher L. Wolfgang Alison P. Klein Luis A. Díaz Peter J. Allen C. Max Schmidt Kenneth W. Kinzler Nickolas Papadopoulos Ralph H. Hruban Bert Vogelstein published in 2011. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.