Elsevier

European Urology

Volume 75, Issue 3, March 2019, Pages 378-382
European Urology

Platinum Priority – Brief Correspondence
Editorial by Joaquin Mateo and Joan Carles on pp. 383–384 of this issue
Clinical Features and Therapeutic Outcomes in Men with Advanced Prostate Cancer and DNA Mismatch Repair Gene Mutations

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eururo.2018.10.009Get rights and content

Abstract

Mismatch repair (MMR) gene mutations are rare in prostate cancer, and their histological and clinical characteristics are largely unknown. We conducted a retrospective study to explore disease characteristics and treatment outcomes of men with metastatic prostate cancer harboring germline and/or somatic MMR mutations detected using clinical-grade genomic assays. Thirteen patients with a deleterious MMR gene mutation were identified. Median age was 64 yr, 75% had grade group 5 (Gleason sum 9 or 10), 23% had intraductal histology, 46% had metastatic disease at initial diagnosis, and 31% had visceral metastases. Most patients (46%) had MSH6 mutations, 73% demonstrated microsatellite instability, and median tumor mutational load was 18/Mb (range, 3–165 mutations/Mb). Surprisingly, responses to standard hormonal therapies were very durable (median progression-free survival [PFS] of 67 mo to initial androgen deprivation and median PFS of 26 mo to abiraterone/enzalutamide). Two of four men receiving PD-1 inhibitors achieved a ≥50% prostate-specific antigen response at 12 wk, with a median PFS duration in these four men of 9 mo. Despite aggressive clinical and pathological features, patients with MMR-mutated advanced prostate cancer appear to have particular sensitivity to hormonal therapies, as well as anecdotal responses to PD-1 inhibitors. Certain histological features (grade group 5, intraductal carcinoma) should prompt evaluation for MMR deficiency. These data are only hypothesis generating.

Patient summary

Prostate cancers with mismatch repair gene mutations have aggressive clinical and pathological features; however, these are very sensitive to standard and novel hormonal therapies, and also demonstrate anecdotal sensitivity to PD-1 inhibitors such as pembrolizumab.

References (15)

  • D. Robinson et al.

    Integrative clinical genomics of advanced prostate cancer

    Cell

    (2015)
  • P. Isaacsson Velho et al.

    PD-1/PD-L1 pathway inhibitors in advanced prostate cancer

    Expert Rev Clin Pharmacol

    (2018)
  • D.T. Le et al.

    Mismatch repair deficiency predicts response of solid tumors to PD-1 blockade

    Science

    (2017)
  • J.N. Graff et al.

    Early evidence of anti-PD-1 activity in enzalutamide-resistant prostate cancer

    Oncotarget

    (2016)
  • M.T. Schweizer et al.

    Mismatch repair deficiency may be common in ductal adenocarcinoma of the prostate

    Oncotarget

    (2016)
  • V. Lee et al.

    Mismatch repair deficiency and response to immune checkpoint blockade

    Oncologist

    (2016)
  • K. Boudadi et al.

    Ipilimumab plus nivolumab and DNA-repair defects in AR-V7–expressing metastatic prostate cancer

    Oncotarget

    (2018)
There are more references available in the full text version of this article.

Cited by (0)

View full text