Relationship among DNA damage response gene alterations, molecular subtypes, and survival outcomes in patients with metastatic bladder cancer treated on CALGB 90601 Journal Article


Authors: Iyer, G.; Choi, W.; Luo, B.; Carvalho, F.; Hanlon, T.; Reis, H.; Guercio, B. J.; Fong, M.; Mountain, J.; Feng, M.; Regazzi, A. M.; McCart, L.; Wen, Y.; Al-Ahmadie, H.; Mouw, K. W.; Van Allen, E. M.; Bellmunt, J.; Dreicer, R.; Flaig, T. W.; Halabi, S.; McConkey, D. J.; Rosenberg, J. E.
Article Title: Relationship among DNA damage response gene alterations, molecular subtypes, and survival outcomes in patients with metastatic bladder cancer treated on CALGB 90601
Abstract: PURPOSE In urothelial carcinoma, prior studies have indicated that the basal/squamous molecular subtype and the presence of select DNA damage response (DDR) gene alterations are associated with improved benefit from cisplatin-based chemotherapy. We sought to evaluate these biomarkers in specimens from the phase III Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB) 90601 trial. METHODS We performed whole-transcriptome sequencing (n 5 188) and exon capture DNA sequencing (n 5 208) on pretreatment tumors from the CALGB 90601 randomized trial of gemcitabine/cisplatin plus bevacizumab or placebo in patients with treatment-naïve metastatic bladder cancer. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed on tumors from 22 patients who exhibited rapid progression or durable response. Tumors were assigned to molecular subtypes using three different classifiers. Proportional hazards model was used to correlate molecular subtype with overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS), adjusting for stratification factors and treatment arm (for PFS). RESULTS Patients with basal tumors had the shortest PFS and OS in the entire cohort. PFS was numerically longer in patients with basal tumors receiving bevacizumab. DDR gene alterations were not associated with improved outcomes. FRY, a candidate predictive biomarker of chemosensitivity identified by WES, did not confer sensitivity to cisplatin or gemcitabine in functional studies. CONCLUSION Molecular subtype and DDR alterations did not correlate with improved outcomes in CALGB 90601. Possible explanations for these results include the small cohort size, lack of strong therapeutic effects of the treatments, genomic heterogeneity between profiled specimens and the metastatic lesions under treatment pressure, and differences in biology associated with different disease states (muscle-invasive v metastatic disease). © 2025 by American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Keywords: adult; cancer survival; controlled study; human tissue; treatment response; middle aged; major clinical study; overall survival; exon; mutation; bevacizumab; cisplatin; placebo; cancer growth; gemcitabine; cancer patient; gene; metastasis; progression free survival; cohort analysis; chemosensitivity; tumor marker; molecular typing; dna damage response; visceral metastasis; randomized controlled trial (topic); phase 3 clinical trial (topic); dna sequencing; human; article; rna sequencing; whole exome sequencing; whole transcriptome sequencing; transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder; fry gene
Journal Title: JCO Precision Oncology
Volume: 9
ISSN: 2473-4284
Publisher: American Society of Clinical Oncology  
Date Published: 2025-08-01
Start Page: e2400938
Language: English
DOI: 10.1200/po-24-00938
PUBMED: 40591902
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- MSK corresponding author is Jonathan Rosenberg -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Gopakumar Vasudeva Iyer
    351 Iyer
  2. Ashley Regazzi
    93 Regazzi
  3. Jonathan Eric Rosenberg
    519 Rosenberg