npj Genomic Medicine (Jan 2023)

Personalized matched targeted therapy in advanced pancreatic cancer: a pilot cohort analysis

  • Justin Shaya,
  • Shumei Kato,
  • Jacob J. Adashek,
  • Hitendra Patel,
  • Paul T. Fanta,
  • Gregory P. Botta,
  • Jason K. Sicklick,
  • Razelle Kurzrock

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41525-022-00346-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Despite progress, 2-year pancreatic cancer survival remains dismal. We evaluated a biomarker-driven, combination/N-of-one strategy in 18 patients (advanced/metastatic pancreatic cancer) (from Molecular Tumor Board). Targeted agents administered/patient = 2.5 (median) (range, 1–4); first-line therapy (N = 5); second line, (N = 13). Comparing patients (high versus low degrees of matching) (matching score ≥50% versus <50%; reflecting number of alterations matched to targeted agents divided by number of pathogenic alterations), survival was significantly longer (hazard ratio [HR] 0.24 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.078–0.76, P = 0.016); clinical benefit rates (CBR) (stable disease ≥6 months/partial/complete response) trended higher (45.5 vs 0.0%, P = 0.10); progression-free survival, HR, 95% CI, 0.36 (0.12–1.10) (p = 0.075). First versus ≥2nd-line therapy had higher CBRs (80.0 vs 7.7%, P = 0.008). No grade 3–4 toxicities occurred. The longest responder achieved partial remission (17.5 months) by co-targeting MEK and CDK4/6 alterations (chemotherapy-free). Therefore, genomically matched targeted agent combinations were active in these advanced pancreatic cancers. Larger prospective trials are warranted.