Print Email Facebook Twitter Genetic factors associated with a poor outcome in head and neck cancer patients receiving definitive chemoradiotherapy Title Genetic factors associated with a poor outcome in head and neck cancer patients receiving definitive chemoradiotherapy Author Vossen, David M. (Netherlands Cancer Institute) Verhagen, Caroline V.M. (Netherlands Cancer Institute) van der Heijden, Martijn (Netherlands Cancer Institute) Essers, Paul B.M. (Netherlands Cancer Institute) Bartelink, Harry (Netherlands Cancer Institute) Verheij, Marcel (Netherlands Cancer Institute) Wessels, L.F.A. (TU Delft Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatics; Netherlands Cancer Institute) van den Brekel, Michiel W.M. (Netherlands Cancer Institute; Universiteit van Amsterdam; Amsterdam UMC) Vens, Conchita (Netherlands Cancer Institute) Date 2019 Abstract About half of advanced stage head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patients can be cured by chemoradiotherapy. Patient outcome may be partially determined by the genetic alterations in HNSCC, rendering these alterations promising candidate prognostic factors and/or therapeutic targets. However, their relevance in patient outcome prognosis remains to be assessed in patients that receive standard-of-care chemoradiotherapy. We therefore tested whether frequent genetic alterations were associated with progression free survival (PFS) in advanced stage HNSCC patients who were uniformly treated with definitive platinum-based chemoradiotherapy. To this end, we performed targeted DNA sequencing on frozen pre-treatment tumor biopsy material from 77 patients with advanced stage oro- and hypopharyngeal carcinoma. This provided somatic point mutation and copy number aberration data of 556 genes. The most frequently mutated genes, TP53 (62%), CCND1 (51%), CDKN2A (30%) and PIK3CA (21%), were not associated with PFS. However, co-occurring CCND1 and CDKN2A mutations were associated with short PFS (HR 2.24, p = 0.028) in HPV-negative tumors. Furthermore, tumor mutational burden (sum of somatic point mutations) showed a trend towards decreased PFS (HR 1.9, p = 0.089), and chromosomal instability (CIN) was associated with shorter PFS (HR 2.3, p = 0.023), independent of HPV status. Our results show that tumor mutational burden, CIN markers, and co-occurring CCND1 and CDKN2A mutations are associated with chemoradiotherapy outcomes in advanced stage oro- and hypopharyngeal HNSCC patients, thereby highlighting their prognostic potential. Given their poor prognosis association and link to biological targets, they may also identify patients for novel targeted therapies and immunotherapies Subject ChemoradiotherapyDNA sequence analysisGenomicsHead and neck squamous cell carcinomaMutationPharyngeal neoplasmsPrognosis To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:33418c1a-66da-47ed-b039-e99102c9885e DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers11040445 ISSN 2072-6694 Source Cancers, 11 (4) Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2019 David M. Vossen, Caroline V.M. Verhagen, Martijn van der Heijden, Paul B.M. Essers, Harry Bartelink, Marcel Verheij, L.F.A. Wessels, Michiel W.M. van den Brekel, Conchita Vens Files PDF cancers_11_00445.pdf 943.22 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:33418c1a-66da-47ed-b039-e99102c9885e/datastream/OBJ/view