“…PTEN altered function occurs in approximately 13.5% of human cancers through inframe, missense, and truncating mutations, gene fusions, amplifications, deletions, epigenetic silencing, and transcriptional modifications ( In particular, PTEN gene alterations are more frequent in endometrial cancer (35%), glial tumors (32%), prostate cancer (17%), melanoma (13%), non-small small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) (12%), and breast cancer (9%) [63][64][65][66][67][68]. Of note, PTEN protein loss is a more frequent event in cancer, compared to PTEN genetic alterations, particularly in lung cancer and breast cancer [42,47,69]. Hence, only 9% of lung squamous cell carcinoma harbor PTEN somatic mutations, while up to 44% showed decreased protein levels [69].…”