Case Reports in Women's Health (Apr 2022)

Investigating a clinically actionable BRAF mutation for monitoring low-grade serous ovarian cancer: A case report

  • R. Silva,
  • B. Moran,
  • S. Das,
  • N. Mulligan,
  • M. Doughty,
  • A. Treacy,
  • K. Sheahan,
  • C.M. Kelly,
  • A.G. Duffy,
  • A.S. Perry,
  • D.J. Brennan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 34
p. e00395

Abstract

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Low-grade serous ovarian cancer (LGSOC) poses a specific clinical challenge due to advanced presentation at diagnosis and the lack of effective systemic treatments. The aim of this study was to use a precision medicine approach to identify clinically actionable mutations in a patient with recurrent LGSOC. Primary, metastatic and recurrence tissue, and blood samples were collected from a stage IV LGSOC patient. Single-gene testing for clinically actionable mutations (BRAF V600, KRAS and NRAS) and subsequent whole-exome sequencing (WES) were performed. Droplet digital PCR was used to evaluate the presence of an identified BRAF D594G mutation in the matched plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA). No clinically actionable mutations were identified using single-gene testing. WES identified a BRAF D594G mutation in six of seven tumor samples. The patient was commenced on a MEK inhibitor, trametinib, but with minimal clinical response. A newly designed ddPCR assay detected the BRAF alteration in the matched tissues and liquid biopsy cfDNA. The identification and sensitive plasma detection of a common “druggable” target emphasises the impact of precision medicine on the management of rare tumors and its potential contribution to novel monitoring regimens in this field.

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