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Genomic Correlate of Exceptional Erlotinib Response in Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Published Web Location

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4557203/
No data is associated with this publication.
Abstract

Importance

Randomized clinical trials demonstrate no benefit for epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitors in unselected patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). However, a patient with stage IVA HNSCC received 13 days of neoadjuvant erlotinib and experienced a near-complete histologic response.

Objective

To determine a mechanism of exceptional response to erlotinib therapy in HNSCC.

Design, setting, and participants

Single patient with locally advanced HNSCC who received erlotinib monotherapy in a window-of-opportunity clinical trial (patients scheduled to undergo primary cancer surgery are treated briefly with an investigational agent). Whole-exome sequencing of pretreatment tumor and germline patient samples was performed at a quaternary care academic medical center, and a candidate somatic variant was experimentally investigated for mediating erlotinib response.

Intervention

A brief course of erlotinib monotherapy followed by surgical resection.

Main outcomes and measures

Identification of pretreatment tumor somatic alterations that may contribute to the exceptional response to erlotinib. Hypotheses were formulated regarding enhanced erlotinib response in preclinical models harboring the patient tumor somatic variant MAPK1 E322K following the identification of tumor somatic variants.

Results

No EGFR alterations were observed in the pretreatment tumor DNA. Paradoxically, the tumor harbored an activating MAPK1 E322K mutation (allelic fraction 0.13), which predicts ERK activation and erlotinib resistance in EGFR-mutant lung cancer. The HNSCC cells with MAPK1 E322K exhibited enhanced EGFR phosphorylation and erlotinib sensitivity compared with wild-type MAPK1 cells.

Conclusions and relevance

Selective erlotinib use in HNSCC may be informed by precision oncology approaches.

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