BRAF mutational status is associated with survival outcomes in locally advanced resectable and metastatic NSCLC

•Efficacy of ICIs in NSCLC patients with BRAF mutations remains uncertain.•Our data showed an increased pathological complete response rate in BRAF-mutant NSCLC patients versus BRAF-wt NSCLC patients.•The presence of BRAF mutations was associated with better PFS and OS.•Our results suggest a potenti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Lung cancer (Amsterdam, Netherlands) Netherlands), 2024-08, Vol.194, p.107865, Article 107865
Hauptverfasser: Provencio, Mariano, Robado de Lope, Lucía, Serna-Blasco, Roberto, Nadal, Ernest, Diz Tain, Pilar, Massuti, Bartomeu, González-Larriba, José Luis, Insa, Amelia, Sánchez-Hernández, Alfredo, Casal-Rubio, Joaquín, García-Campelo, Rosario, Sequero López, Silvia, Rogado, Jacobo, Martínez-Martí, Alex, Bosch-Barrera, Joaquim, Bernabé, Reyes, Vázquez Estévez, Sergio, Ponce, Santiago, de Castro, Javier, Coves Sarto, Juan, Reguart, Noemí, Dómine, Manuel, Aguilar, Andrés, Majem, Margarita, Estival, Anna, Peña Cabia, Silvia, López Martín, Ana, Sala González, María Ángeles, Cobo, Manuel, Camps, Carlos, Barneto, Isidoro, Calvo, Virginia, Collazo-Lorduy, Ana, Cruz-Bermúdez, Alberto, Romero, Atocha
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Efficacy of ICIs in NSCLC patients with BRAF mutations remains uncertain.•Our data showed an increased pathological complete response rate in BRAF-mutant NSCLC patients versus BRAF-wt NSCLC patients.•The presence of BRAF mutations was associated with better PFS and OS.•Our results suggest a potential avenue for treating BRAF-positive NSCLC patients with ICIs. Immunotherapy-based treatments have demonstrated high efficacy in patients with advanced and locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). BRAF mutations affect a small but significant fraction of NSCLC. The efficacy of these therapies in this subgroup of patients is unknown. Plasma and tissue samples from 116 resectable stage IIIA/B NSCLC patients, included in NADIM and NADIM II clinical trials (NADIM cohort), and from a prospective academic cohort with 84 stage IV NSCLC patients (BLI-O cohort), were analyzed by next-generation sequencing. The p.G464E, p.G466R, p.G466V, p.G469V, p.L597Q, p.T599I, p.V600E (n = 2) BRAF mutations, were identified in four (3.45 %) samples from the NADIM cohort, all of which were cases treated with neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy (CH-IO), and four (4.76 %) samples from the BLI-O cohort, corresponding to cases treated with first-line immunotherapy (n = 2) or CH-IO (n = 2). All these patients were alive and had no evidence of disease at data cut-off. Conversely, patients with BRAF wild-type (wt) tumors in the BLI-O cohort had a median progression-free survival (PFS) of 5.49 months and a median overall survival (OS) of 12.00 months (P-LogRank = 0.013 and 0.046, respectively). Likewise, PFS and OS probabilities at 36 months were 60.5 % and 76.1 % for patients with BRAF-wt tumors in the NADIM cohort. The pathological complete response (pCR) rate after neoadjuvant CH-IO in patients with BRAF-positive tumors (n = 4) was 100 %, whereas the pCR rate in the BRAF-wt population was 44.3 % (RR: 2.26; 95 % CI: 1.78–2.85; P 
ISSN:0169-5002
1872-8332
1872-8332
DOI:10.1016/j.lungcan.2024.107865