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Genomic profiling of biliary tract carcinomas by their location
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Genomic profiling of biliary tract carcinomas by their location

Zoran Gatalica, David K. Edwards, Cynthia A. Flannery, David W. Hall, Jess R Hoag, Nishitha Therala, Janine R. LoBello, Snehal Govind Thakkar, Gargi D. Basu and Maen Abdelrahim
Journal of clinical oncology, Vol.41(16_suppl), pp.e16175-e16175
06/01/2023

Abstract

e16175 Background: Historically, biliary tract cancers have had a poor prognosis. Genomic profiling allows identification of alterations in genes with FDA-approved matched therapies either in these cancers ( FGFR2/3 fusions, certain IDH1 missense mutations), in all solid tumors (e.g. BRAF V600E mutations), or in other cancers (e.g. BRCA1/2 loss-of-function mutations) that could inform treatment. Here we examine the frequency of matched therapies in biliary tract carcinomas and the association with tumor location. Methods: All biliary tract carcinoma patient samples receiving the OncoExTra assay between April 2018 and November 2022 were included. The assay uses tumor-normal, whole-exome, whole-transcriptome sequencing to identify genomic alterations. Alterations in genes with FDA-approved matched therapies in any cancer, with matched clinical trials, or with evidence in cancer guidelines or the literature for possible matched therapies were recorded. Results: A total of 155 patient samples were processed: 92 intrahepatic CCA, 34 gall bladder carcinomas, 9 extrahepatic CCA, and 20 ampulla of Vater carcinomas. Targetable alterations were found in 153 (98.7%) samples; 31 (20.3%) had FDA-approved matched therapies, including 5 (3.3%) with microsatellite unstable and/or tumor mutational burden-high (eligible for immunotherapy) and 7 (4.6%) homologous recombinational repair deficient. Alterations of several genes showed a significant association with tumor type (Table). Cancers in the ampulla of Vater were enriched for KRAS, APC and ARID2 alterations; TP53 alterations were less frequent in biliary tract/intrahepatic cancers. Among the 15 FGFR1/2/3 alterations, there were 3 amplifications (1 FGFR1, 1 FGFR2, 1 FGFR3), 3 missense FGFR2 mutations, and 9 FGFR2 fusions. Conclusions: Comprehensive genomic profiling of biliary tract cancers identifies numerous targetable alterations. The distribution of altered genes varies, suggesting that appropriate therapies may differ by location, reflecting different lineage types. [Table: see text]

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