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Pathogenic and targetable genetic alterations in 70 urachal adenocarcinomas.

Henning Reis ,
Kristan E van der Vos ,
Christian Niedworok ,
Thomas Herold ,
Orsolya Módos ,
Attila Szendrői ,
Thomas Hager ,
Marc Ingenwerth ,
Daniël J Vis ,
Mark A Behrendt ,
Jeroen de Jong ,
Michiel S van der Heijden ,
Benoit Peyronnet ,
Romain Mathieu ,
Marcel Wiesweg ,
Jason Ablat ,
Krzysztof Okon ,
Yuri Tolkach ,
David Keresztes ,
Nikolett Nagy ,
Felix Bremmer ,
Nadine T Gaisa ,
Piotr Chlosta ,
Joerg Kriegsmann ,
Ilona Kovalszky ,
József Timar ,
Glen Kristiansen ,
Heinz-Joachim Radzun ,
Ruth Knüchel ,
Martin Schuler ,
Peter C Black ,
Herbert Rübben ,
Boris A Hadaschik ,
Kurt Werner Schmid ,
Bas W G van Rhijn ,
Péter Nyirády ,
Tibor Szarvas

Abstract

Urachal cancer (UrC) is a rare but aggressive malignancy often diagnosed in advanced stages requiring systemic treatment. Although cytotoxic chemotherapy is of limited effectiveness, prospective clinical studies can hardly be conducted. Targeted therapeutic treatment approaches and potentially immunotherapy based on a biological rationale may provide an alternative strategy. We therefore subjected 70 urachal adenocarcinomas to targeted next-generation sequencing, conducted in situ and immunohistochemical analyses (including PD-L1 and DNA mismatch repair proteins [MMR]) and evaluated the microsatellite instability (MSI) status. The analytical findings were correlated with clinicopathological and outcome data and Kaplan-Meier and univariable/multivariable Cox regression analyses were performed. The patients had a mean age of 50 years, 66% were male and a 5-year overall survival (OS) of 58% and recurrence-free survival (RFS) of 45% was detected. Sequence variations were observed in TP53 (66%), KRAS (21%), BRAF (4%), PIK3CA (4%), FGFR1 (1%), MET (1%), NRAS (1%), and PDGFRA (1%). Gene amplifications were found in EGFR (5%), ERBB2 (2%), and MET (2%). We detected no evidence of MMR-deficiency (MMR-d)/MSI-high (MSI-h), whereas 10 of 63 cases (16%) expressed PD-L1. Therefore, anti-PD-1/PD-L1 immunotherapy approaches might be tested in UrC. Importantly, we found aberrations in intracellular signal transduction pathways (RAS/RAF/PI3K) in 31% of UrCs with potential implications for anti-EGFR therapy. Less frequent potentially actionable genetic alterations were additionally detected in ERBB2 (HER2), MET, FGFR1, and PDGFRA. The molecular profile strengthens the notion that UrC is a distinct entity on the genomic level with closer resemblance to colorectal than to bladder cancer.

More about this publication

International journal of cancer

Volume 143
Issue nr. 7
Pages 1764-1773
Publication date 01-10-2018

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1002/ijc.31547
Europe PubMed Central 29672836
Pubmed 29672836

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