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Molecular profiling and target actionability for precision medicine in neuroendocrine neoplasms: real-world data.

Authors :
Boilève, Alice
Faron, Matthieu
Fodil-Cherif, Sarah
Bayle, Arnaud
Lamartina, Livia
Planchard, David
Tselikas, Lambros
Kanaan, Christina
Scoazec, Jean Yves
Ducreux, Michel
Italiano, Antoine
Baudin, Eric
Hadoux, Julien
Source :
European Journal of Cancer. Jun2023, Vol. 186, p122-132. 11p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Key molecular alterations (MA) of neuroendocrine neoplasm (NEN) of various grade/primaries have been described but the applicability of molecular profiling (MP) for precision medicine in NEN remains to be demonstrated. We conducted a retrospective study of all patients with metastatic NEN who had MP on tumour tissue at Gustave Roussy. The primary objective was to assess the clinical applicability of MP by evaluating the growth modulator index (GMI) as the primary end-point. MPs were obtained in 114 out of 156 eligible patients, including 12% NET-G1, 42% NET-G2, 13% NET-G3 and 35% neuroendocrine carcinoma (NEC). Primary sites were lung/thymus (40%), pancreas (19%), gastro-intestinal (16%), head&neck (10%), unknown (10%) and others (10%) with synchronous metastases in 61% of the patients. Most frequent MA were: MEN1 (25%), PTEN (13%), TP53 (11%) and TSC2 (9%), in neuroendocrine tumour (NET), and TP53 (50%) and RB1 (18%) in NEC. ESMO Scale for Clinical Actionability of Molecular Targets (ESCAT) classification of these MA were: I(5%), III(20%), IV(23%), X(27%); a putative actionable MA was identified in 48% patients. Median TMB was 5.7 Mut/Mb, with 3 TMB > 10 and 1 MSI NET. No MA was found in 26% patients. Molecularly matched treatment was administered to 19 patients (4 NEC, 15 NET): immunotherapy (n = 3), tipifarnib (n = 1), NOTCHi (n = 1), EGFRi (n = 2), HER2i (n = 1) and everolimus (n = 11). Overall, 67% of patients had a clinical benefit defined as a GMI over 1.3 with a 78% disease control rate. We report 48% of NEN with a putative actionable MA of which 35% received molecularly matched treatment, with a clinical benefit in 67% of the cases. • Molecular alterations of NEN of various grade/primaries have been described. • Applicability of molecular profiling in NEN remains to be demonstrated. • We describe the largest cohort of metastatic NENs molecularly characterised. • We report the clinical benefit obtained in NENs with molecular profiling. • Our results put in a routine perspective the impact of precision medicine in NENs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09598049
Volume :
186
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Journal of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163714988
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2023.03.024