Lorlatinib Induces Durable Disease Stabilization in a Pancreatic Cancer Patient with a ROS1 p.L1950F Mutation: Case Report

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The prognosis of pancreatic cancer has improved only modestly in recent years. This is partly due to the lack of development in precision oncology including immune oncology in this entity. Rearrangements of the proto-oncogene tyrosine protein kinase ROS1 gene represent driver alterations found especially in lung cancer. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) with activity against ROS1 including lorlatinib substantially improved the outcome of this patient population. Anecdotal evidence reports treatment of pancreatic cancer harboring ROS1 fusions with ROS1 TKI, but data concerning treatment of patients with ROS1 point mutations are lacking.

CASE PRESENTATION: This case describes a pancreatic cancer patient harboring a ROS1 point mutation that occurred without an underlying ROS1 rearrangement and thus not in the resistance situation. The heavily pretreated patient showed a strong decrease of the tumor biomarkers (CA19-9 and CEA) and radiologically a durable stable disease to the targeted treatment with lorlatinib, thereby achieving a progression-free survival of 12 months.

CONCLUSION: Our data are the first to show a clinical benefit from targeted treatment with ROS1 TKI in a cancer patient with a thus far undescribed ROS1 point mutation without a concomitant ROS1 rearrangement. Furthermore, they indicate that ROS1 could be an oncogenic driver in pancreatic cancer. This subgroup could be eligible for targeted treatments, which may contribute to the urgently needed improvement in patient outcome.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN2296-5270
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2021
PubMed 34320493