Frontiers in Oncology (May 2023)

Ongoing complete response after treatment cessation with dabrafenib, trametinib, and cetuximab as third-line treatment in a patient with advanced BRAFV600E mutated, microsatellite-stable colon cancer: A case report and literature review

  • Gudrun Piringer,
  • Gudrun Piringer,
  • Gudrun Piringer,
  • Jörn Decker,
  • Vera Trommet,
  • Thomas Kühr,
  • Thomas Kühr,
  • Sonja Heibl,
  • Sonja Heibl,
  • Konrad Dörfler,
  • Josef Thaler,
  • Josef Thaler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1166545
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Metastatic BRAFV600E mutated colorectal cancer is associated with poor overall survival and modest effectiveness to standard therapies. Furthermore, survival is influenced by the microsatellite status. Patients with microsatellite-stable and BRAFV600E mutated colorectal cancer have the worst prognosis under the wide range of genetic subgroups in colorectal cancer. Herein, we present a patient case of an impressive therapeutic efficacy of dabrafenib, trametinib, and cetuximab as later-line therapy in a 52-year-old woman with advanced BRAFV600E mutated, microsatellite-stable colon cancer. This patient achieved a complete response after 1 year of triple therapy. Due to skin toxicity grade 3 and recurrent urinary tract infections due to mucosal toxicity, a therapy de-escalation to dabrafenib and trametinib was performed, and the double therapy was administered for further 41 months with ongoing complete response. For 1 year, the patient was off therapy and is still in complete remission.

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