Cancer of unknown primary with gastrointestinal profiles: A favorable CUP subset.

Journal of Clinical Oncology(2022)

引用 0|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
e16225 Background: Cancer of unknown primary (CUP) with a “gastrointestinal (GI) profile” appears to be a clinically distinct subset, based on immunophenotyping, specifically staining with cytokeratins 20 (CK20) and 7 (CK7), a type I and II keratin, respectively and caudal type homeobox 2 (CDX2) protein, a transcription factor expressed in nuclei of intestinal epithelial cells. However, only a limited clinicomolecular account of this entity exists. Comprehensive profiling is needed to impact personalized therapeutics and improve prognosis. Methods: We identified 497 pts using a retrospective/prospectively managed CUP database and tumor registry of pts evaluated at MD Anderson Cancer Center from 2012-2016. Pts were classified into 3 cohorts based on immunohistochemistry: lower GI profile CUP (LGI-CUP) [CK20+/CK7- or CK20+/CK7+/CDX2+], upper GI profile CUP (UGI-CUP) [CK20-/CDX2+ or CK7+/CK20+/CDX2-] and remaining were treated as a non-GI CUP (NGI-CUP) control group [CK20-/CDX2-]. Clinical and pathological data including molecular profiling, therapy and survival were logged. Fisher-exact test was used. Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate overall survival (OS) and compared with log-rank test. Results: Among 497 pts, 316 (63.6%) had adequate immunostaining for analysis. Of these, 76 (24.1%), 75 (23.7%) and 165 (52.2%) were classified as LGI-CUP, UGI-CUP, and NGI-CUP, respectively. Median age at diagnosis for the 3 cohorts was 59, 62 and 60 years, respectively. Key baseline clinicopathological characteristics were balanced between groups except histology and Culine risk stratification. LGI-CUP were enriched for adenocarcinoma (89% v 54% v 57%, P = 0.009) and good risk group (65% v 46% v 43%, P < 0.001) compared to UGI-CUP and NGI-CUP, respectively. Median OS for the 3 cohorts were: 18.5 months (95%CI: 10.8–26.2) for LGI-CUP compared to 12.3 months (95%CI: 6.3–18.3) for UGI-CUP (P = 0.06) and 13.5 months (95%CI: 10.6–16.6) for NGI-CUP (P = 0.040). On multivariate analyses, LGI-CUP subtype emerged as an independent prognostic factor for better overall survival (HR 0.69, 95%CI: 0.5–0.9, P = 0.046) in addition to histology and Culine risk group. Among LGI-CUP, 39 pts with complete treatment data, 29 (74%) received frontline colorectal cancer specific chemotherapy (5-FU/Capecitabine-based) therapy. Median time to treatment failure was 3.6 months compared 1.8 months for those who received non-colorectal therapy (P = 0.19). For LGI-CUP, most common genomic alterations were TP53 (22%), ERBB2 (12%), KRAS (10%). For UGI-CUP, most common genomic alterations were KRAS (11%), and TP53 (9%). Conclusions: CUP pts with lower GI profile have improved overall survival compared to those with an upper GI or a non-GI immunophenotype. Identifying these CUP subsets and rational use of immunotherapy and targeted therapy may provide benefit to CUP pts, particularly as these treatments evolve for the management of known GI cancers.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要