Patterns of Whole Exome Sequencing in Resected Cholangiocarcinoma

Cancers (Basel). 2021 Aug 12;13(16):4062. doi: 10.3390/cancers13164062.

Abstract

Background: With minimally effective chemotherapy options, cholangiocarcinoma patients have 5 year survival rate of 10%. Tumor genetic profiling (TGP) can identify mutations susceptible to targeted therapies. We sought to describe the use of TGP and frequency of actionable results in resected cholangiocarcinoma.

Methods: A retrospective review of patients undergoing curative intent resection at a comprehensive cancer center (2010-2020). Clinicopathologic and partial or whole exome sequencing data were reviewed.

Results: 114 patients (mean age 65 ± 11 years, 45% female) underwent resection of cholangiocarcinoma (46% poorly differentiated, 54% intrahepatic, 36% node positive, 75% margin negative). Additionally, 32% of patients underwent TGP, yielding a mean of 3.1 actionable mutations per patient (range 0-14). Mutations aligned with a median of one drug per patient (range 0-11). Common mutations included TP53 (33%), KRAS (31%), IDH1/2 (14%), FGFR (14%), and BRAF (8%). Targeted therapies were administered in only 4% of patients (23% of eligible sequenced patients). After a median 22 months, 23% had recurrence and 29% were deceased.

Discussion: TGP for cholangiocarcinoma has increased over the last decade with targeted therapies identified in most sequenced tumors, impacting treatment in a quarter of eligible patients. Precision medicine will play a central role in the future care of cholangiocarcinoma.

Keywords: cholangiocarcinoma; tumor genomic sequencing; whole exome sequencing.