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Data from Homologous Recombination DNA Repair Pathway Disruption and Retinoblastoma Protein Loss Are Associated with Exceptional Survival in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer

Authors :
Anna deFazio
David D. L. Bowtell
Brad H. Nelson
Paul Harnett
Martin Köbel
Alexander Dobrovic
Alison Brand
Michael Friedlander
Penny Blomfield
Philip Beale
Robert M. Rome
Yee C. Leung
Paul A. Cohen
Marisa Grossi
Sumitra Ananda
Anne Hamilton
Linda Mileshkin
Orla McNally
Peter F. Rambau
Prue E. Allan
Raghwa Sharma
Colin J.R. Stewart
Jillian Hung
Nicola Waddell
John V. Pearson
Sean M. Grimmond
Kaushalya Amarasinghe
Giada V. Zapparoli
Thomas Mikeska
Joy Hendley
Yoke-Eng Chiew
Sreeja R. Gadipally
Timothy Semple
Gisela Mir Arnau
Jason Li
Ann-Marie Patch
Joshy George
Katy Milne
Maartje C.A. Wouters
Elizabeth L. Christie
Valérie Garès
Val Gebski
Bo Gao
Dariush Etemadmoghadam
Catherine J. Kennedy
Catherine Emmanuel
Sian Fereday
Kathryn Alsop
Dale W. Garsed
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose: Women with epithelial ovarian cancer generally have a poor prognosis; however, a subset of patients has an unexpected dramatic and durable response to treatment. We sought to identify clinical, pathological, and molecular determinants of exceptional survival in women with high-grade serous cancer (HGSC), a disease associated with the majority of ovarian cancer deaths.Experimental Design: We evaluated the histories of 2,283 ovarian cancer patients and, after applying stringent clinical and pathological selection criteria, identified 96 with HGSC that represented significant outliers in terms of treatment response and overall survival. Patient samples were characterized immunohistochemically and by genome sequencing.Results: Different patterns of clinical response were seen: long progression-free survival (Long-PFS), multiple objective responses to chemotherapy (Multiple Responder), and/or greater than 10-year overall survival (Long-Term Survivors). Pathogenic germline and somatic mutations in genes involved in homologous recombination (HR) repair were enriched in all three groups relative to a population-based series. However, 29% of 10-year survivors lacked an identifiable HR pathway alteration, and tumors from these patients had increased Ki-67 staining. CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes were more commonly present in Long-Term Survivors. RB1 loss was associated with long progression-free and overall survival. HR deficiency and RB1 loss were correlated, and co-occurrence was significantly associated with prolonged survival.Conclusions: There was diversity in the clinical trajectory of exceptional survivors associated with multiple molecular determinants of exceptional outcome in HGSC patients. Concurrent HR deficiency and RB1 loss were associated with favorable outcomes, suggesting that co-occurrence of specific mutations might mediate durable responses in such patients. Clin Cancer Res; 24(3); 569–80. ©2017 AACR.See related commentary by Peng and Mills, p. 508

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3ed2291a07166ccbe08482ae5f1ed332