| Literature DB >> 36128324 |
Melanie Demes1,2, Ursula Pession2,3, Jan Jeroch1, Falko Schulze1,2, Katrin Eichler2,4, Daniel Martin2,5, Peter Wild1,2, Oliver Waidmann2,6,7.
Abstract
Anal cancer is a rare disease with increasing incidence. In patients with locally recurrent or metastatic disease which cannot be treated with chemoradiotherapy or salvage surgery systemic first-line chemotherapy with carboplatin and paclitaxel is standard of care. For patients who progress after first-line therapy and are still eligible for second-line therapy Programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) antibodies are potential therapeutic options. However, prediction of response to immunotherapy is still challenging including anal cancer. We report here to our knowledge the first anal cancer case with microsatellite instability (MSI) due to MLH1 mutation and a deep and ongoing response to Nivolumab treatment. Namely, thorough analysis of the primary tumor as well as metastatic sites by next generation sequencing (NGS) revealed that MSI was formally only found in the metastatic sites but not in the primary tumor. Concomitantly, tumor mutational burden (TMB) was higher in the metastatic site than in the primary tumor. Therefore, we conclude that all anal cancer patients should be tested for MSI and whenever possible molecular analysis should be performed rather from metastatic sites than from the primary tumor. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: anal cancer; high-throughput nucleotide sequencing; immunotherapy; microsatellite instability; nivolumab
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36128324 PMCID: PMC9477220 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.28274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Histochemistry and immunohistochemistry of tumor tissue of primary cancer and lymph node metastasis.
Slides from formalin fixed paraffin embedded tissue samples form primary tumor and supraclavicular metastasis were stained for Hematoxylin-eosin, p16 and PD-L1.
Figure 2Contrast enhanced computed tomography of the chest and abdomen at beginning, during and at the end of nivolumab treatment.
Representative lymph node metastases are shown before, during at end of treatment. Arrows show the metastatic sites before start of treatment.
Figure 3Expression of mismatch repair proteins in primary tumor and supraclavicular metastasis.
Slides from formalin fixed paraffin embedded tissue samples form primary tumor and supraclavicular metastasis were stained for Hematoxylin-eosin, and the mismatch repair proteins MLH1, PMS2, MSH2, and MSH6.
Microsatellite instability (MSI), cutoff (percent of unstable MSI sites) = 20%
| Primary tumor | Supraclavicular metastasis | Inguinal metastasis | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unstable MSI sites | 155 | 117 | 115 |
| Unstable MSI sites (total) | 17 | 29 | 25 |
| Percent unstable MSI sites | 14.78 | 24.79 | 21.74 |
| MSI status | stable | unstable | unstable |
Tumor mutational burden (TMB), coding target region size 1.31 MB
| Primary tumor | Supraclavicular metastasis | Inguinal metastasis | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-synonymous SNVs | 15 (11.43 Mut/Mb) | 29 (22.10 Mut/Mb) | 35 (26.67 Mut/Mb) |
| synonymous SNVs | 4 (3.05 Mut/Mb) | 13 (9.91 Mut/Mb) | 13 (9.91 Mut/Mb) |
| Deletions, insertions, indels | 4 (3.05 Mut/Mb) | 9 (6.86 Mut/Mb) | 12 (9.15 Mut/Mb) |
| TMB based on selected variant types (Mut/Mb) | 17.53 (TMB-L/TMB-H) | 38.87 (TMB-H) | 45.73 (TMB-H) |
Defined TMB-L threshold TMB (Mut/Mb) < 5
Defined TMB-H threshold TMB (Mut/Mb) > 20