TRK fusions are enriched in cancers with uncommon histologies and the absence of canonical driver mutations Journal Article


Authors: Rosen, E. Y.; Goldman, D. A.; Hechtman, J. F.; Benayed, R.; Schram, A. M.; Cocco, E.; Shifman, S.; Gong, Y.; Kundra, R.; Solomon, J. P.; Bardelli, A.; Scaltriti, M.; Drilon, A.; Iasonos, A.; Taylor, B. S.; Hyman, D. M.
Article Title: TRK fusions are enriched in cancers with uncommon histologies and the absence of canonical driver mutations
Abstract: Purpose: TRK inhibitors achieve marked tumor-agnostic efficacy in TRK fusion-positive cancers and consequently are now an established standard of care. Little is known, however, about the demographics, outcomes, response to alternative standard therapies, or genomic characteristics of TRK fusion-positive cancers. Experimental Design: Utilizing a center-wide screening program involving more than 26,000 prospectively sequenced patients, genomic and clinical data from all cases with TRK fusions were extracted. An integrated analysis was performed of genomic, therapeutic, and phenomic outcomes. Results: We identified 76 cases with confirmed TRK fusions (0.28% overall prevalence) involving 48 unique rearrangements and 17 cancer types. The presence of a TRK fusion was associated with depletion of concurrent oncogenic drivers (P < 0.001) and lower tumor mutation burden (P < 0.001), with the exception of colorectal cancer where TRK fusions cooccur with microsatellite instability (MSI-H). Longitudinal profiling in a subset of patients indicated that TRK fusions were present in all sampled timepoints in 82% (14/17) of cases. Progression-free survival on first-line therapy, excluding TRK inhibitors, administered for advanced disease was 9.6 months [95% confidence interval (CI), 4.8-13.2]. The best overall response rate achieved with chemotherapy containing-regimens across all lines of therapy was 63% (95% CI, 41-81). Among 12 patients treated with checkpoint inhibitors, a patient with MSI-H colorectal cancer had the only observed response. Conclusions: TRK fusion-positive cancers can respond to alternative standards of care, although efficacy of immunotherapy in the absence of other predictive biomarkers (MSI-H) appears limited. TRK fusions are present in tumors with simple genomes lacking in concurrent drivers that may partially explain the tumor-agnostic efficacy of TRK inhibitors. © 2020 American Association for Cancer Research Inc.. All rights reserved.
Keywords: adolescent; adult; cancer chemotherapy; child; controlled study; aged; gene mutation; major clinical study; histopathology; advanced cancer; antineoplastic agent; colorectal cancer; gene; cancer immunotherapy; progression free survival; prevalence; tumor marker; gene rearrangement; infant; microsatellite instability; newborn; gene fusion; human; male; female; priority journal; article; malignant neoplasm; trk gene
Journal Title: Clinical Cancer Research
Volume: 26
Issue: 7
ISSN: 1078-0432
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2020-04-01
Start Page: 1624
End Page: 1632
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.Ccr-19-3165
PUBMED: 31871300
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC7124988
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Alexia Elia Iasonos
    362 Iasonos
  2. David Hyman
    354 Hyman
  3. Alexander Edward Drilon
    632 Drilon
  4. Barry Stephen Taylor
    238 Taylor
  5. Alison Michele Schram
    122 Schram
  6. Debra Alyssa Goldman
    158 Goldman
  7. Maurizio Scaltriti
    169 Scaltriti
  8. Jaclyn Frances Hechtman
    212 Hechtman
  9. Rym Benayed
    188 Benayed
  10. Ritika   Kundra
    88 Kundra
  11. Emiliano Cocco
    31 Cocco
  12. Sophie Shifman
    10 Shifman
  13. James Patrick Solomon
    15 Solomon
  14. Ezra Y Rosen
    49 Rosen
  15. Yixiao Gong
    7 Gong