Frontiers in Oncology (Oct 2023)

Characterization of a cohort of metastatic lung cancer patients harboring KRAS mutations treated with immunotherapy: differences according to KRAS G12C vs. non-G12C

  • Lucía Notario,
  • Marc Cucurull,
  • Gabriela Cerdà,
  • Carolina Sanz,
  • Enric Carcereny,
  • Ana Muñoz-Mármol,
  • Ainhoa Hernández,
  • Marta Domènech,
  • Teresa Morán,
  • Montse Sánchez-Céspedes,
  • Marta Costa,
  • Jose-Luis Mate,
  • Anna Esteve,
  • Maria Saigí

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1239000
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Approximately 20% of lung adenocarcinomas harbor activating mutations at KRAS, an oncogene with the ability to alter the tumor immune microenvironment. In this retrospective study, we examined 103 patients with KRAS-mutant lung adenocarcinoma who were treated with immunotherapy-based regimens and we evaluated the clinical outcomes according to PD-L1 expression and the type of KRAS mutation. Among all patients included, 47% carried KRAS G12C mutation whereas 53% harbored KRAS non-G12C mutations. PD-L1 status was available for 77% of cases, with higher expression among KRAS G12C tumors (p = 0.01). Better overall survival and progression-free survival were observed in high PD-L1 expression tumors, regardless of KRAS mutation type. The heterogeneous nature of KRAS-mutant tumors and the presence of other co-mutations may contribute to different outcomes to immunotherapy-based strategies.

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