Inicio  /  Cancers  /  Vol: 11 Núm: 1 Par: January (2019)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Detection of TP53 Mutations in Tissue or Liquid Rebiopsies at Progression Identifies ALK+ Lung Cancer Patients with Poor Survival

Petros Christopoulos    
Steffen Dietz    
Martina Kirchner    
Anna-Lena Volckmar    
Volker Endris    
Olaf Neumann    
Simon Ogrodnik    
Claus-Peter Heussel    
Felix J. Herth    
Martin Eichhorn    
Michael Meister    
Jan Budczies    
Michael Allgäuer    
Jonas Leichsenring    
Tomasz Zemojtel    
Helge Bischoff    
Peter Schirmacher    
Michael Thomas    
Holger Sültmann and Albrecht Stenzinger    

Resumen

Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) sequencing can identify resistance mechanisms and guide next-line therapy in ALK+ non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), but the clinical significance of other rebiopsy findings remains unclear. We analysed all stage-IV ALK+ NSCLC patients with longitudinally assessable TP53 status treated in our institutions (n = 62). Patients with TP53 mutations at baseline (TP53mutbas, n = 23) had worse overall survival (OS) than patients with initially wild-type tumours (TP53wtbas, n = 39, 44 vs. 62 months in median, p = 0.018). Within the generally favourable TP53wtbas group, detection of TP53 mutations at progression defined a ?converted? subgroup (TP53mutconv, n = 9) with inferior OS, similar to that of TP53mutbas and shorter than that of patients remaining TP53 wild-type (TP53wtprogr, 45 vs. 94 months, p = 0.043). Progression-free survival (PFS) under treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) for TP53mutconv was comparable to that of TP53mutbas and also shorter than that of TP53wtprogr cases (5 and 8 vs. 13 months, p = 0.0039). Fewer TP53wtprogr than TP53mutbas or TP53mutconv cases presented with metastatic disease at diagnosis (67% vs. 91% or 100%, p < 0.05). Thus, acquisition of TP53 mutations at progression is associated with more aggressive disease, shorter TKI responses and inferior OS in ALK+ NSCLC, comparable to primary TP53 mutated cases.

 Artículos similares