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Baseline mutational profiles of patients with carcinoma of unknown primary origin enrolled in the CUPISCO study

Authors :
Westphalen, C B
Federer-Gsponer, J
Pauli, C
Karapetyan, A R
Chalabi, N
Durán-Pacheco, G
Beringer, A
Bochtler, T
Cook, N
Höglander, E
Jin, D X
Losa, F
Mileshkin, L
Moch, H
Ross, J S
Sokol, E S
Tothill, R W
Krämer, A
Westphalen, C B
Federer-Gsponer, J
Pauli, C
Karapetyan, A R
Chalabi, N
Durán-Pacheco, G
Beringer, A
Bochtler, T
Cook, N
Höglander, E
Jin, D X
Losa, F
Mileshkin, L
Moch, H
Ross, J S
Sokol, E S
Tothill, R W
Krämer, A
Source :
Westphalen, C B; Federer-Gsponer, J; Pauli, C; Karapetyan, A R; Chalabi, N; Durán-Pacheco, G; Beringer, A; Bochtler, T; Cook, N; Höglander, E; Jin, D X; Losa, F; Mileshkin, L; Moch, H; Ross, J S; Sokol, E S; Tothill, R W; Krämer, A (2023). Baseline mutational profiles of patients with carcinoma of unknown primary origin enrolled in the CUPISCO study. ESMO Open, 8(6):102035.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with unfavorable carcinoma of unknown primary origin (CUP) have an extremely poor prognosis of ∼1 year or less, stressing the need for more tailored treatments, which are currently being tested in clinical trials. CUPISCO (NCT03498521) was a phase II randomized study of targeted therapy/cancer immunotherapy versus platinum-based chemotherapy in patients with previously untreated, unfavorable CUP, defined as per the European Society for Medical Oncology guidelines. We present a preliminary, descriptive molecular analysis of 464 patients with stringently diagnosed, unfavorable CUP enrolled in the CUPISCO study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Genomic profiling was carried out on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue to detect genomic alterations and assess tumor mutational burden and microsatellite instability. RESULTS: Overall, ∼32% of patients carried a potentially targetable genomic alteration, including PIK3CA, FGFR2, ERBB2, BRAF$^{V600E}$, EGFR, MET, NTRK1, ROS1, and ALK. Using hierarchical clustering of co-mutational profiles, 10 clusters were identified with specific genomic alteration co-occurrences, with some mirroring defined tumor entities. CONCLUSIONS: Results reveal the molecular heterogeneity of patients with unfavorable CUP and suggest that genomic profiling may be used as part of informed decision-making to identify the potential primary tumor and targeted treatment options. Whether stringently diagnosed patients with unfavorable CUP benefit from targeted therapies in a similar manner to those with matched known primaries will be a key learning from CUPISCO.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Westphalen, C B; Federer-Gsponer, J; Pauli, C; Karapetyan, A R; Chalabi, N; Durán-Pacheco, G; Beringer, A; Bochtler, T; Cook, N; Höglander, E; Jin, D X; Losa, F; Mileshkin, L; Moch, H; Ross, J S; Sokol, E S; Tothill, R W; Krämer, A (2023). Baseline mutational profiles of patients with carcinoma of unknown primary origin enrolled in the CUPISCO study. ESMO Open, 8(6):102035.
Notes :
application/pdf, info:doi/10.5167/uzh-240249, English, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1443056486
Document Type :
Electronic Resource