Comprehensive molecular characterization and response to therapy in fumarate hydratase–deficient renal cell carcinoma

JP Gleeson, I Nikolovski, R Dinatale, M Zucker… - Clinical Cancer …, 2021 - AACR
JP Gleeson, I Nikolovski, R Dinatale, M Zucker, A Knezevic, S Patil, Y Ged, RR Kotecha…
Clinical Cancer Research, 2021AACR
Purpose: Fumarate hydratase–deficient renal cell carcinoma (FH-RCC) is a rare, aggressive
form of RCC associated with hereditary leiomyomatosis and RCC syndrome. Evidence for
systemic therapy efficacy is lacking. Experimental Design: We studied clinical and genomic
characteristics of FH-RCC, including response [objective response rate (ORR)] to systemic
therapies and next-generation sequencing (NGS). Patients with metastatic FH-RCC, defined
by presence of pathogenic germline or somatic FH mutation plus IHC evidence of FH loss …
Purpose
Fumarate hydratase–deficient renal cell carcinoma (FH-RCC) is a rare, aggressive form of RCC associated with hereditary leiomyomatosis and RCC syndrome. Evidence for systemic therapy efficacy is lacking.
Experimental Design
We studied clinical and genomic characteristics of FH-RCC, including response [objective response rate (ORR)] to systemic therapies and next-generation sequencing (NGS). Patients with metastatic FH-RCC, defined by presence of pathogenic germline or somatic FH mutation plus IHC evidence of FH loss, were included.
Results
A total of 28 of 32 included patients (median age 46; range, 20–74; M:F, 20:12) underwent germline testing; 23 (82%) harbored a pathogenic FH germline variant. Five (16%) were negative for germline FH mutations; all had biallelic somatic FH loss. Somatic NGS (31/32 patients) revealed co-occurring NF2 mutation most frequently (n = 5). Compared with clear-cell RCC, FH-RCC had a lower mutation count (median 2 vs. 4; P < 0.001) but higher fraction of genome altered (18.7% vs. 10.3%; P = 0.001). A total of 26 patients were evaluable for response to systemic therapy: mTOR/VEGF combination (n = 18, ORR 44%), VEGF monotherapy (n = 15, ORR 20%), checkpoint inhibitor therapy (n = 8, ORR 0%), and mTOR monotherapy (n = 4, ORR 0%). No complete responses were seen. Median overall and progression-free survival were 21.9 months [95% confidence interval (CI): 14.3–33.8] and 8.7 months (95% CI: 4.8–12.3), respectively.
Conclusions
Although most FH-RCC tumors are due to germline FH alterations, a significant portion result from biallelic somatic FH loss. Both somatic and germline FH-RCC have similar molecular characteristics, with NF2 mutations, low tumor mutational burden, and high fraction of genome altered. Although immunotherapy alone produced no objective responses, combination mTOR/VEGF therapy showed encouraging results.
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