Current Oncology (Jun 2024)

Durable Objective Response to Lurbinectedin in Small Cell Bladder Cancer with TP53 Mutation: A Molecular-Directed Strategy

  • Mohammad Jad Moussa,
  • Jaanki Khandelwal,
  • Nathaniel R. Wilson,
  • Sagar A. Naik,
  • Vivek Subbiah,
  • Matthew T. Campbell,
  • Pavlos Msaouel,
  • Parminder Singh,
  • Omar Alhalabi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31060254
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31, no. 6
pp. 3342 – 3349

Abstract

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Small cell bladder cancer (SCBC) is a rare and aggressive disease, often treated with platinum/etoposide-based chemotherapy. Key molecular drivers include the inactivation of onco-suppressor genes (TP53, RB1) and amplifications in proto-oncogenes (MYC). We report a patient with SCBC who achieved an objective and prolonged response to lurbinectedin, which has been approved for metastatic small cell lung cancer, after developing disease progression on cisplatin/etoposide and nivolumab/ipilimumab. A genomic analysis of a metastatic biopsy prior to lurbinectedin initiation revealed a TP53 mutation and amplification of the cell cycle regulators E2F3 and MYCL. A repeat biopsy following the development of lurbinectedin resistance showed a new actionable ERBB2 alteration without significant change in the tumor mutation burden (six mutations/Mb). The present report suggests that lurbinectedin may be active and should be further explored in SCBC harboring TP53 mutations and amplifications in E2F3 and MYC family complexes.

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