Clinical and genomic landscape of FGFR3-altered urothelial carcinoma and treatment outcomes with erdafitinib: A real-world experience Journal Article


Authors: Guercio, B. J.; Sarfaty, M.; Teo, M. Y.; Ratna, N.; Duzgol, C.; Funt, S. A.; Lee, C. H.; Aggen, D. H.; Regazzi, A. M.; Chen, Z.; Lattanzi, M.; Al-Ahmadie, H. A.; Brannon, A. R.; Shah, R.; Chu, C.; Lenis, A. T.; Pietzak, E.; Bochner, B. H.; Berger, M. F.; Solit, D. B.; Rosenberg, J. E.; Bajorin, D. F.; Iyer, G.
Article Title: Clinical and genomic landscape of FGFR3-altered urothelial carcinoma and treatment outcomes with erdafitinib: A real-world experience
Abstract: PURPOSE: Erdafitinib is the only FDA-approved targeted therapy for FGFR2/3-altered metastatic urothelial cancer. We characterized the genetic landscape of FGFR-altered urothelial carcinoma and real-world clinical outcomes with erdafitinib, including on-treatment genomic evolution. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Prospectively collected clinical data were integrated with institutional genomic data to define the landscape of FGFR2/3-altered urothelial carcinoma. To identify mechanisms of erdafitinib resistance, a subset of patients underwent prospective cell-free (cf) DNA assessment. RESULTS: FGFR3 alterations predictive of erdafitinib sensitivity were identified in 39% (199/504) of patients with non-muscle invasive, 14% (75/526) with muscle-invasive, 43% (81/187) with localized upper tract, and 26% (59/228) with metastatic specimens. One patient had a potentially sensitizing FGFR2 fusion. Among 27 FGFR3-altered cases with a primary tumor and metachronous metastasis, 7 paired specimens (26%) displayed discordant FGFR3 status. Erdafitinib achieved a response rate of 40% but median progression-free and overall survival of only 2.8 and 6.6 months, respectively (n = 32). Dose reductions (38%, 12/32) and interruptions (50%, 16/32) were common. Putative resistance mutations detected in cfDNA involved TP53 (n = 5), AKT1 (n = 1), and second-site FGFR3 mutations (n = 2). CONCLUSIONS: FGFR3 mutations are common in urothelial carcinoma, whereas FGFR2 alterations are rare. Discordance of FGFR3 mutational status between primary and metastatic tumors occurs frequently and raises concern over sequencing archival primary tumors to guide patient selection for erdafitinib therapy. Erdafitinib responses were typically brief and dosing was limited by toxicity. FGFR3, AKT1, and TP53 mutations detected in cfDNA represent putative mechanisms of acquired erdafitinib resistance. ©2023 American Association for Cancer Research.
Keywords: treatment outcome; genetics; pathology; fibroblast growth factor receptor 3; bladder tumor; urinary bladder neoplasms; genomics; carcinoma, transitional cell; transitional cell carcinoma; receptor, fibroblast growth factor, type 3; humans; human; fgfr3 protein, human; erdafitinib; cell-free nucleic acids; cell free nucleic acid
Journal Title: Clinical Cancer Research
Volume: 29
Issue: 22
ISSN: 1078-0432
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2023-11-15
Start Page: 4586
End Page: 4595
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.Ccr-23-1283
PUBMED: 37682528
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11233068
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PubMed and PDF -- MSK corresponding author is Gopa Iyer -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Dean Bajorin
    658 Bajorin
  2. David Solit
    779 Solit
  3. Gopakumar Vasudeva Iyer
    344 Iyer
  4. Bernard Bochner
    468 Bochner
  5. Michael Forman Berger
    765 Berger
  6. Ashley Regazzi
    89 Regazzi
  7. Angela Rose Brannon
    99 Brannon
  8. Jonathan Eric Rosenberg
    511 Rosenberg
  9. Ronak Hasmukh Shah
    72 Shah
  10. Chung-Han   Lee
    157 Lee
  11. Samuel Aaron Funt
    136 Funt
  12. Min Yuen   Teo
    105 Teo
  13. Eugene J Pietzak
    116 Pietzak
  14. David Henry Aggen
    57 Aggen
  15. Ziyu Chen
    11 Chen
  16. Neha Ratna
    14 Ratna
  17. Brendan John Guercio
    15 Guercio
  18. Carissa Ellen Chu
    13 Chu