Cancer Medicine (Aug 2023)

Prognostic value of Lynch syndrome, BRAFV600E, and RAS mutational status in dMMR/MSI‐H metastatic colorectal cancer in a pooled analysis of Dutch and French cohorts

  • Koen Zwart,
  • Frederieke H. van derBaan,
  • Romain Cohen,
  • Thomas Aparicio,
  • Christelle de laFouchardiére,
  • Thierry Lecomte,
  • Cornelis J. A. Punt,
  • David Sefrioui,
  • Rik J. Verheijden,
  • Geraldine R. Vink,
  • G. Emerens Wensink,
  • Aziz Zaanan,
  • Miriam Koopman,
  • David Tougeron,
  • Jeanine M. L. Roodhart

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.6223
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 15
pp. 15841 – 15853

Abstract

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Abstract Background Current knowledge on prognostic biomarkers (especially BRAFV600E/RAS mutations) in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) is mainly based on mCRC patients with proficient mismatch repair (pMMR) tumors. It is uncertain whether these biomarkers have the same prognostic value in mCRC patients with deficient mismatch repair (dMMR) tumors. Methods This observational cohort study combined a population‐based Dutch cohort (2014–2019) and a large French multicenter cohort (2007–2017). All mCRC patients with a histologically proven dMMR tumor were included. Results In our real‐world data cohort of 707 dMMR mCRC patients, 438 patients were treated with first‐line palliative systemic chemotherapy. Mean age of first‐line treated patients was 61.9 years, 49% were male, and 40% had Lynch syndrome. BRAFV600E mutation was present in 47% of tumors and 30% harbored a RAS mutation. Multivariable regression analysis on OS showed significant hazard rates (HR) for known prognostic factors as age and performance status, however showed no significance for Lynch syndrome (HR: 1.07, 95% CI: 0.66–1.72), BRAFV600E mutational status (HR: 1.02, 95% CI: 0.67–1.54), and RAS mutational status (HR: 1.01, 95% CI: 0.64–1.59), with similar results for PFS. Conclusion BRAFV600E and RAS mutational status are not associated with prognosis in dMMR mCRC patients, in contrast to pMMR mCRC patients. Lynch syndrome is also not an independent prognostic factor for survival. These findings underline that prognostic factors of patients with dMMR mCRC are different of those with pMMR, which could be taken into consideration when prognosis is used for clinical decision‐making in dMMR mCRC patients and underline the complex heterogeneity of mCRC.

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