Authors
Jun Gong, Chongkai Wang, Peter P Lee, Peiguo Chu, Marwan Fakih
Publication date
2017/2/1
Journal
Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network
Volume
15
Issue
2
Pages
142-147
Publisher
Harborside Press, LLC
Description
Recent clinical evidence has demonstrated that microsatellite instability (MSI) or defective mismatch repair (MMR) and high tumor mutational load can predict response to the programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) receptor inhibitor pembrolizumab in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). Mutations in polymerase ε (POLE), a DNA polymerase involved in DNA replication and repair, contribute to an ultramutated but microsatellite stable (MSS) phenotype in colorectal tumors that is uniquely distinct from MSI tumors. This report presents the first case in the literature describing a clinical response to pembrolizumab in an 81-year-old man with treatment-refractory mCRC characterized by an MSS phenotype and POLE mutation identified on genomic profiling by next-generation sequencing. On tumor immunostaining, a large amount of CD8-positive tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) were present, with> 90% of these expressing …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Gong, C Wang, PP Lee, P Chu, M Fakih - Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer …, 2017