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Chromoplectic TPM3-ALK rearrangement in a patient with inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor who responded to ceritinib after progression on crizotinib

Authors :
Geoffrey C. Halling
Dennis A. Wigle
Steven I. Robinson
Stephen J. Murphy
Aaron S. Mansfield
Faye R. Harris
Jin Jen
Sarah H. Johnson
E. S. Yi
George Vasmatzis
Randolph S. Marks
James B. Smadbeck
Source :
Annals of Oncology
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Ceritinib resulted in a significant, durable response of a metastatic inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (IMT) after failure of crizotinib. A chromoplectic TPM3–ALK rearrangement involving many known oncogenes was found in the residual IMT. Ceritinib may be useful for patients with IMT after failure of crizotinib, and chromoplexy may have a role in the oncogenesis or treatment resistance of IMTs.<br />Background Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors (IMTs) are rare sarcomas that can occur at any age. Surgical resection is the primary treatment for patients with localized disease; however, these tumors frequently recur. Less commonly, patients with IMTs develop or present with metastatic disease. There is no standard of care for these patients and traditional cytotoxic therapy is largely ineffective. Most IMTs are associated with oncogenic ALK, ROS1 or PDGFRβ fusions and may benefit from targeted therapy. Patient and methods We sought to understand the genomic abnormalities of a patient who presented for management of metastatic IMT after progression of disease on crizotinib and a significant and durable partial response to the more potent ALK inhibitor ceritinib. Results The residual IMT was resected based on the recommendations of a multidisciplinary tumor sarcoma tumor board and analyzed by whole-genome mate pair sequencing. Analysis of the residual, resected tumor identified a chromoplectic TPM3–ALK rearrangement that involved many other known oncogenes and was confirmed by rtPCR. Conclusions In our analysis of the treatment-resistant, residual IMT, we identified a complex pattern of genetic rearrangements consistent with chromoplexy. Although it is difficult to know for certain if these chromoplectic rearrangements preceded treatment, their presence suggests that chromoplexy has a role in the oncogenesis of IMTs. Furthermore, this patient's remarkable response suggests that ceritinib should be considered as an option after progression on crizotinib for patients with metastatic or unresectable IMT and ALK mutations.

Details

ISSN :
15698041
Volume :
27
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2e3744e79c756cff916cea0716c94961