INTRODUCTION: In the last decade, immune-checkpoint therapy has led to a break-through in the treatment of cancer across all entities, while molecular markers have grown in importance for the choice of the appropriate chemotherapeutic agents. Accordingly, in 2017, the US Food and Drug Administration approved the programmed cell death protein 1 inhibitor pembrolizumab, a tissue agnostic cancer drug, for the treatment of cancer that displays microsatellite instability, regardless of histological entity and site of origin. However, a growing number of studies report that cases of microsatellite-stable (MSS) tumors harboring a DNA polymerase ε (POLE) mutation, a gene associated with proofreading deficiency, leading to an increased tumor mutational burden, likewise benefit from immune-checkpoint therapy.
CASE REPORT: Here, we present 2 cases - one advanced adenocarcinoma of the ileum and one mixed neuroendocrine non-neuroendocrine neoplasm, both MSS and carrying a POLE mutation - that were refractory to initial chemotherapy but responded on immunotherapy with pembrolizumab.
CONCLUSION: Colorectal cancer is a clinically and molecularly heterogenic disease which requires comprehensive genetic testing to screen for rare genetic alterations like POLE mutations to detect tumors harboring an ultramutator phenotype, especially in patients that are refractory to standard chemotherapy.
«
INTRODUCTION: In the last decade, immune-checkpoint therapy has led to a break-through in the treatment of cancer across all entities, while molecular markers have grown in importance for the choice of the appropriate chemotherapeutic agents. Accordingly, in 2017, the US Food and Drug Administration approved the programmed cell death protein 1 inhibitor pembrolizumab, a tissue agnostic cancer drug, for the treatment of cancer that displays microsatellite instability, regardless of histological e...
»