Department of Investigational Cancer Therapeutics (Phase I Program), The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.
Division of Cancer Medicine, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.
Mol Cancer Ther. 2018 Jul;17(7):1595-1601. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-17-1107. Epub 2018 Apr 13.
The European Society for Medical Oncology defines rare cancers as 5 or fewer cases per 100,000 persons per year. For many rare cancers, no standard of care exists, and treatment is often extrapolated. Identifying potentially targetable genomic alterations in rare tumors is a rational approach to improving treatment options. We sought to catalog these mutations in rare tumors and to assess their clinical utility.For this retrospective analysis, we selected rare tumor patients from a dataset of patients who underwent clinical tumor genomic profiling. Sarcomas were excluded. To index potentially actionable alterations, patients' reports were reviewed for mutations in cancer-associated genes and pathways. Respective clinical records were abstracted to appraise the benefit of using a targeted therapy approach. Actionable alterations were defined as targeted by a drug available on-label, off-label, or in clinical trials.The 95 patients analyzed had 40 different tumor subtypes, most common being adenoid cystic (13%), cholangiocarcinoma (7%), and metaplastic breast (6%). At least one genomic alteration was identified in 87 patients (92%). The most common identifiable mutations were in (23%), (10%), (9%), (8%), (7%), (7%), and (6%). Thirty-six patients (38%) with 21 different tumors had at least one potentially actionable alteration. Thirteen patients received targeted therapy. Of these, 4 had a partial response, 6 had stable disease, and 3 had progressive disease as the best response.The addition of genomic profiling to management of rare cancers adds a potential line of therapy for cancers that have little or no standard of care. In our analysis, tumors with a alteration responded well to inhibitors. .
欧洲肿瘤内科学会将罕见癌症定义为每年每 10 万人中少于 5 例。对于许多罕见癌症,不存在标准的治疗方法,治疗方法通常是推断出来的。鉴定罕见肿瘤中潜在的可靶向基因组改变是改善治疗选择的合理方法。我们试图在罕见肿瘤中对这些突变进行分类,并评估其临床应用价值。
在这项回顾性分析中,我们从接受临床肿瘤基因组分析的患者数据集中选择了罕见肿瘤患者。排除了肉瘤。为了确定潜在的可治疗性改变,我们回顾了患者报告中癌症相关基因和途径的突变。提取了相应的临床记录,以评估使用靶向治疗方法的益处。可治疗性改变定义为可用的药物、标签外或临床试验靶向。
分析的 95 名患者有 40 种不同的肿瘤亚型,最常见的是腺样囊性癌(13%)、胆管癌(7%)和间变性乳腺癌(6%)。87 名患者(92%)至少发现了一种基因组改变。最常见的可识别突变发生在 (23%)、 (10%)、 (9%)、 (8%)、 (7%)、 (7%)和 (6%)。21 种不同肿瘤的 36 名患者(38%)至少有一种潜在的可治疗性改变。13 名患者接受了靶向治疗。其中,4 名患者有部分缓解,6 名患者病情稳定,3 名患者疾病进展为最佳反应。
将基因组分析添加到罕见癌症的治疗管理中,为几乎没有或没有标准治疗方法的癌症提供了一种潜在的治疗方法。在我们的分析中,携带 改变的肿瘤对 抑制剂反应良好。