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Stage IV Colorectal Cancer Patients with High Risk Mutation Profiles Survived 16 Months Longer with Individualized Therapies

Authors :
Andre Franke
Clemens Schafmayer
Casey Williams
Greta Burmeister
Peter Forster
Anu Amallraja
Philip Rosenstiel
Sebastian Hinz
Alexander Hendricks
Tobias Meißner
Michael Forster
Hendricks, Alexander [0000-0002-7286-9245]
Meißner, Tobias [0000-0002-9680-7153]
Forster, Michael [0000-0001-9927-5124]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Cancers, Cancers, Vol 12, Iss 2, p 393 (2020), Volume 12, Issue 2
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Personalized treatment vs. standard of care is much debated, especially in clinical practice. Here we investigated whether overall survival differences in metastatic colorectal cancer patients are explained by tumor mutation profiles or by treatment differences in real clinical practice. Our retrospective study of metastatic colorectal cancer patients of confirmed European ancestry comprised 54 Americans and 54 gender-matched Germans. The Americans received standard of care, and on treatment failure, 35 patients received individualized treatments. The German patients received standard of care only. Tumor mutations, tumor mutation burden and microsatellite status were identified by using the FoundationOne assay or the IDT Pan-Cancer assay. High-risk patients were identified according to the mutational classification by Schell and colleagues. Results: Kaplan&ndash<br />Meier estimates show the high-risk patients to survive 16 months longer under individualized treatments than those under only standard of care, in the median (p &lt<br />0.001). Tumor mutation profiles stratify patients by risk groups but not by country. Conclusions: High-risk patients appear to survive significantly longer (p &lt<br />0.001) if they receive individualized treatments after the exhaustion of standard of care treatments. Secondly, the tumor mutation landscape in Americans and Germans is congruent and thus warrants the transatlantic exchange of successful treatment protocols and the harmonization of guidelines.

Details

ISSN :
20726694
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancers
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0b990b33209e68f9410d0d4fb5e54742
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12020393