Cancers (Apr 2023)

Clinical Behavior, Mutational Profile and T-Cell Repertoire of High-Grade Neuroendocrine Tumors of the Head and Neck

  • Santiago Cabezas-Camarero,
  • Vanesa García-Barberán,
  • Javier David Benítez-Fuentes,
  • Miguel J. Sotelo,
  • José Carlos Plaza,
  • Alejandro Encinas-Bascones,
  • Óscar De-la-Sen,
  • Farzin Falahat,
  • Jesús Gimeno-Hernández,
  • Manuel Gómez-Serrano,
  • Fernando Puebla-Díaz,
  • Manuel De-Pedro-Marina,
  • Maricruz Iglesias-Moreno,
  • Pedro Pérez-Segura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15092431
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 9
p. 2431

Abstract

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Neuroendocrine carcinomas (NECs) of the head and neck (HN) account for n = 8 stage II/IVA/B, all received (chemo)radiotherapy with/without prior surgery or induction chemotherapy, with complete response in 7/8 (87.5%). Among n = 6 recurrent/metastatic patients, three received anti-PD1 (nivolumab (2), pembrolizumab (1)): two achieved partial responses lasting 24 and 10 months. After a median follow-up of 30 and 23.5 months since diagnosis and since recurrent/metastatic, median OS was not reached. Median TMB (n = 7) was 6.72 Mut/Mb. The most common pathogenic variants were TP53, HNF1A, SMARCB1, CDKN2A, PIK3CA, RB1 and MYC. There were 224 median TCR clones (n = 5 pts). In one patient, TCR clones increased from 59 to 1446 after nivolumab. HN NECs may achieve long-lasting survival with multimodality treatment. They harbor moderate-high TMBs and large TCR repertoires, which may explain responses to anti-PD1 agents in two patients and justify the study of immunotherapy in this disease.

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