| Literature DB >> 28993730 |
Albert Cornelius1, Jessica Foley1, Jeffrey Bond1, Abhinav B Nagulapally1, Julie Steinbrecher1, William P D Hendricks1, Maria Rich1, Sangeeta Yendrembam1, Genevieve Bergendahl1, Jeffrey M Trent1, Giselle S Sholler1.
Abstract
Choroid plexus carcinomas (CPCs) are rare, aggressive pediatric brain tumors with no established curative therapy for relapsed disease, and poor survival rates. TP53 Mutation or dysfunction correlates with poor or no survival outcome in CPCs. Here, we report the case of a 4 month-old female who presented with disseminated CPC. After initial response to tumor resection and adjuvant-chemotherapy, the tumor recurred and metastasized with no response to aggressive relapse therapy suggesting genetic predisposition. This patient was then enrolled to a Molecular Guided Therapy Clinical Trial. Genomic profiling of patient tumor and normal sample identified a TP53 germline mutation with loss of heterozygosity, somatic mutations including IDH2, and aberrant activation of biological pathways. The mutations were not targetable for therapy. However, targeting the altered biological pathways (mTOR, PDGFRB, FGF2, HDAC) guided identification of possibly beneficial treatment with a combination of sirolimus, thalidomide, sunitinib, and vorinostat. This therapy led to 92% reduction in tumor size with no serious adverse events, excellent quality of life and long term survival.Entities:
Keywords: IDH2; TP53; choroid plexus carcinoma; mTOR; molecular guided therapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28993730 PMCID: PMC5622196 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00652
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Relapse chemotherapy treatment strategy, molecular guided therapy strategy, and associated costs.
| Sept–Nov 2012 (3 cycles) | Bevacizumab 10 mg/kg Irinotecan 125 mg/m2 Temodar 140 mg/m2 × 5 days | P D | Low blood counts | Temozolamide Irinotecan Bevacizumab Supportive Meds | 1,500 | 5 1 1 5 | Clinic Facility: $500/day Clinic Exam: $200/day Transfusion: $1,000 each Admission:$4,000/day | Drug $4,823 Medical $5,900 | $10,723 |
| Dec–Jan 2013 (2 cycles) | Methotrexate 8 gm/m2 Viscristine 1.5 mg/m2 | S D | Low blood counts Nausea and Vomiting | Methotrexate Vincristine Supportive Meds | 1,300 | 3 1 4 | Drug $6,920 Medical $17,600 AE: $8,000 | $32,520 | |
| Mar–Jul 2013 (2 cycles of each) | Ifosfamide 1,800 mg/m2 × 5 days Etoposide 100 mg/m2 × 5 days Alternating with: Viscristine 1.5 mg/m2 Carboplatin 560 mg/m2 | S D | Low blood counts Nausea and Vomiting Infections (Abscess) Anorexia | Ifosfamide Etoposide Supportive Meds Viscristine Carboplatin Supportive Meds | 100 | 5 5 5 1 1 3 | Drug $4,100 Medical $23,700 AE: $20,000 Drug $4,823 Medical $14,000 AE:$20,000 | $47,800 $38,823 | |
| Aug–Sept 2013 (1 cycles) | Methotrexate 8 gm/m2 Viscristine 1.5 mg/m2 | P D | Low blood counts Nausea/ Vomit Anorexia | Methotrexate Vincristine Supportive Meds | 1300 20 1,500 | Drug $6,920 Medical $17,600 AE: $8,000 | $32,520 | ||
| Sept 2013–Sept 2016 | Thalidomide 4 mg/kg/day Sunitinib 15 mg/m2/dose Sirolimus 1 mg/m2/day Vorinostat 200 mg/m2/dose Supportive Meds | P R | Low blood counts | Thalidomide Sunitinib Sirolimus Vorinostat Supportive Meds | 12,566 2,123 1,252 969 0 | 28 21 28 14 | 1 Clinic Exam: $220 Sequencing Cost: $2000 | $18,910 | $19,130 |
PD (Progressive Disease), SD (Stable Disease).
Figure 1Genomic Analysis of the CPC patient. (A) Circos plot of WES results. (B) Mutation Diagrams of IDH2 and TP53 (Tetramerization) in context of protein domains. (C) Differential gene expression in the CPC patient. Gene expression levels were compared to a normal whole body reference composed of 45 normal tissues and assigned as Z-scores. (D) Schematic presentation of signaling pathways affected in the CPC patient's tumor and drug targets. These pathways include mTOR, PDGFRB, FGF2, HDAC3, and HDAC8. The treatments chosen for this patient include Sunitinib, Thalidomide, Sirolimus, and Vorinostat.
Description of Somatic acquired point mutations and rare polymorphism detected in CPC patient by whole-exome sequencing.
| rs11448549 | C | CG | Frameshift | G569fs | 55 (74) | 94 | – | – | – | ||
| rs3832797 | ACCC | A | ProteinDel | P209del | 43 (44) | 82 | – | – | – | ||
| rs61233860 | T | TCTC | ProteinIns | K404dup | 38 (27) | 62 | – | – | – | ||
| rs143010547 | TCAGC ACG | T | Frameshift | C203fs | 43 (41) | 51 | – | – | – | ||
| rs2330126 | G | A | Missense | D75N | 21 (28) | 50 | B | T | D | ||
| rs117821239 | G | A | Missense | H1060Y | 43 (98) | 38 | P | T | P | ||
| – | G | T | Missense | R380L | 35 (28) | 35 | – | – | – | ||
| rs11353848 | TC | T | Frameshift | Q4202fs | 49 (43) | 33 | – | – | – | ||
| rs113541584 | TTCC | T | ProteinDel | E802del | 37 (28) | 28 | – | – | – | ||
| – | C | T | Missense | E588K | 47 (67) | 27 | D | D | D | ||
| – | T | G | Missense | F34V | 46 (68) | 27 | D | T | N | ||
| rs372936882 | CCCAC CGAGC GCTGG GGTGC CCCAG | C | ProteinDel | L243_ W250d el | 52(22) | 24 | – | – | – | ||
| – | C | A | Missense | W164C | 30 (22) | 23 | D | D | D | ||
| – | G | A | Missense | A40T | 85 (108) | 22 | B | T | N | ||
| – | G | A | Missense | P336S | 33 (22) | 20 | B | – | N | ||
| – | A | C | Missense | F338C | 35 (52) | 51 | 81 | D | D | D | |
Ref, Reference Allele; Alt, Alternative (Tumor) Allele; AA, Amino Acid; VAF, Variant Allele Frequency; ProteinDel, in-frame deletion; ProteinIns, in-frame insertion; Polyphen2- B, Benign; P, Possibly damaging; D, Probably damaging; SIFT- D, Deleterious; T, Tolerated; MutationTaster- D, Disease_causing; N, Polymorphism; P, Polymorphism_automatic. Alterations with VAF > 20% and decreasing order included.
Figure 2Serial MRI imaging of the CPC patient. MRI at the start of molecular guided therapy regimen (left, Sept 2013), at 7 months (March 2014), at 20 months (June 2015), and at 36 months (September 2016). The arrows indicate the location of the tumor and size reduction over the course of treatment.