Real-world analyses of BRAF alterations in patients with non-colorectal gastrointestinal cancers.

Authors

Amit Mahipal

Amit Mahipal

University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH

Amit Mahipal , Emily Teslow , Ellen B. Jaeger , Melissa Conrad Stoppler , Zhaohui Jin , AMR MOHAMED , Melissa Amy Lumish , Madison Conces , Sakti Chakrabarti

Organizations

University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, Tempus Labs, Inc., Chicago, IL, Division of Medical Oncology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, Department of Oncology, University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH

Research Funding

No funding sources reported

Background: BRAF V600E mutations are present in 5-10% of patients with advanced colorectal cancer (CRC) and associated with poor prognosis. Recently, there was tumor agnostic FDA approval of dabrafenib + trametinib for BRAF V600E mutated solid tumors. However, the frequency of BRAF alterations (BRAF alt), especially non-V600E, in other gastrointestinal (GI) cancers are not well described. This study characterizes BRAF alt in CRC vs other GI cancers (non-CRC). Methods: De-identified records from 51,560 patients diagnosed with GI cancers were retrospectively analyzed from the Tempus database. The molecular landscape including presence of pathogenic/likely pathogenic BRAF alt was evaluated by panel-based tissue DNA, RNA or ctDNA NGS sequencing (Tempus Labs, Inc.). The frequency of BRAF alt, co-mutations, MSI, TMB and MMR were compared between CRC and (non-CRC) by Chi-squared/Fisher’s Exact or Wilcoxon rank-sum tests. False-discovery rate correction was used for multiple testing. Results:BRAF alt were identified in 8.9% of CRC and 2.2% of non-CRC cohort. BRAF alt frequency varied by tumor type with the highest observed in colon (11%), jejunum (9.6%), intrahepatic bile duct (5.3%), rectal (4.5%), and ampulla of vater (4.5%) and lower in esophageal (0.9%) and gastric (1.6%). BRAF alt CRC had higher frequency of females (57% vs 45%, p <0.001) and older age at diagnosis (67 vs 66 yrs, p=0.029) compared to non-CRC group. Race was also significantly different, with white patients being more predominant in both groups (85% CRC,77% non-CRC). Among the BRAF alt, fusions (12% vs 2.2%, p <0.001) and amplifications (3.1% vs 0.3%, p <0.001) were higher in non-CRC vs CRC (Table). BRAF V600E was most common in all GI tumors, but higher in CRC vs non-CRC (75% vs 27%, q<0.001). Mutations higher in non-CRC vs CRC (q<0.009) included class II (G469A, K601E, BRAF-SND1, and BRAF amplification) and class III (D594N & N581S) BRAF alt. BRAF co-occurring mutations in CRC were TP53 (70%), APC (42%), RNF43 (30%), SMAD4 (22%), and PIK3CA (21%), and in non-CRC: TP53 (52%), CDKN2A (32%), CDKN2B (20%) SMAD4 (17%) and MTAP (16%). Among tissue samples, MSI-H (30% vs 4.%, p <0.001) and TMB-H ≥10 mut/MB (32% vs 6.7%, p <0.001) were more frequent in BRAF alt CRC vs non-CRC. Conclusions: Meaningful differences were found between the groups in terms of demographics, frequency, and type of BRAF alt and co-occurring mutations. In particular, certain BRAF fusions were present in a higher proportion of other GI cancers and could be an important therapeutic target for this patient population.

Frequency of BRAF GOF alt types by GI cohort.

BRAF Alt ClassOverall
N = 2,5161
CRC
N = 1,8381
Non-CRC
N = 6781
p-value2
Short variant2,374 (94%)1,797 (98%)577 (85%)<0.001
Copy number amplification27 (1.1%)6 (0.3%)21 (3.1%)<0.001
Fusion123 (4.9%)41 (2.2%)82 (12%)<0.001

1n (%).

2Fisher's exact test; Pearson's Chi-squared test.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2024 ASCO Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium

Session Type

Poster Session

Session Title

Poster Session A: Cancers of the Esophagus and Stomach and Other Gastrointestinal Cancers

Track

Esophageal and Gastric Cancer,Other GI Cancer

Sub Track

Tumor Biology, Biomarkers, and Pathology

Citation

J Clin Oncol 42, 2024 (suppl 3; abstr 759)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2024.42.3_suppl.759

Abstract #

759

Poster Bd #

M14

Abstract Disclosures

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