Prognostic Value of Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptor Genetic Alterations in Metastatic Urothelial Carcinoma

Sarah Fleming,Dina Gifkins, Helaine E. Resnick,Waleed Shalaby, Philip Rosenberg, Chris Gaj,Vittorio Maio, Albert Crawford,Grace Lu-Yao,Jianjun Gao,Arlene Siefker-Radtke

Clinical Genitourinary Cancer(2024)

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摘要
Introduction Evidence is limited on whether fibroblast growth factor receptor gene alterations (FGFRalt) impact clinical outcomes in patients with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer (mUC). This study evaluated progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with mUC based on FGFRalt status in the first-line setting (1L). Patients and methods Data on mUC patients were retrieved via convenience sampling of oncologists/urologists surveyed between August–September 2020 who treated at least one FGFRalt patient between July 2017-June 2019. The questionnaire included information on patient demographics, FGFR status, treatment, and clinical and radiographic measures of progression.Primary endpoint was time from metastatic diagnosis to disease progression from initial treatment for FGFRalt and FGFRwt (wild-type) mUC. Cox proportional hazards models quantified adjusted risk of FGFR status relating to PFS. Results 414 patients were analyzed. Mean age was 64.5 years, 73.9% were male, and 52.7% had an FGFRalt. Among FGFRalt, 47.2% received chemotherapy, 27.5% immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI), 11.5% chemotherapy+ICI, and 13.8% other treatments in 1L. FGFR status did not influence PFS from time of mUC diagnosis or among 224 stratified patients receiving either chemotherapy or chemotherapy+ICI. However, among 97 patients with an FGFRalt receiving 1L ICI therapy only, adjusted risk of progression was twice that of FGFRwt (HR: 2.12; 95% CI: 1.13-4.00). Conclusion Although FGFRalt did not predict outcomes in the overall cohort, for patients treated with 1L ICI, FGFRalt had significantly higher rates of progression than FGFRwt patients. Further validation is needed to determine whether FGFRalt has a decreased benefit from ICI therapy.
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Bladder cancer,epidemiology,survival,genetic aberration,real-world evidence
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