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Poster session 07

343P - DPYD gene sequencing and in silico functionality prediction of polymorphisms in 3,471 colorectal cancer patients treated with fluoropyrimidine (FP)

Date

10 Sep 2022

Session

Poster session 07

Topics

Cytotoxic Therapy;  Translational Research

Tumour Site

Colon and Rectal Cancer

Presenters

Marie-Christine Etienne-Grimaldi

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2022) 33 (suppl_7): S136-S196. 10.1016/annonc/annonc1048

Authors

M. Etienne-Grimaldi1, J.C. BOYER2, E. Menoret3, J. Desvignes3, V. Boige4, J. Taieb5, P. Laurent-Puig6, Y.A. Wettergren7, M. Schwab8, S.P. Ackland9, B. Jennings10, E. Seutin11, J. Rousset11, G. Le Teuff12, N. Cozic12, Y. Koudou12, C. Béroud3

Author affiliations

  • 1 Oncopharmacology Laboratory, Centre Antoine Lacassagne, 06189 - Nice/FR
  • 2 Biochemistry Department, CHU Nimes - Hopital Universitaire Carémeau, 30029 - Nimes, Cedex/FR
  • 3 Bioinformatic And Genetic Department, Aix-Marseille University - Faculté de Médecine - Timone, 13385 - Marseille/FR
  • 4 Oncologic Medecine, Institut Gustave Roussy, 94805 - Villejuif, Cedex/FR
  • 5 Gastroenterology And Digestive Oncology Department, Hopital European George Pompidou, 75015 - Paris/FR
  • 6 Umr1183, Paris Descartes University, 75006 - Paris/FR
  • 7 Department Of Surgery, University of Gothenburg - The Sahlgrenska Academy, 405 30 - Göteborg/SE
  • 8 Clinical Pharmacology, Universitaetsklinikum Tuebingen Medizinische Universitaetsklinik, 72076 - Tuebingen/DE
  • 9 Faculty Of Health And Medicine, The University of Newcastle, 2308 - Callaghan/AU
  • 10 Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, NR4 7TJ - Norwich/GB
  • 11 Centre De Ressources Biologiques Bb-0033-00098, Centre Antoine Lacassagne, 06189 - Nice/FR
  • 12 Biostatistics - Meta-analysis Platform, Gustave Roussy - Cancer Campus, 94805 - Villejuif/FR

Resources

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Abstract 343P

Background

FP pharmacodynamics potentially depends on polymorphisms of genes related to its catabolism, anabolism, folate pathways, targets and transporters. EMA, CPIC and DPWG recommend DPYD testing (consensual variants *2A/*13/D949V/HapB3 of the DPYD gene coding for dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD)) before starting FP chemotherapy. The main objective of this study is to identify a multigenic signature improving current recommendation to identify patients at risk of severe FP-induced toxicities. We herein present genetic results of DPYD sequencing.

Methods

The study included 3,807 Caucasian colorectal cancer patients from 8 studies (4 prospective cohorts, 4 trials) previously selected according to PRISMA Guidelines. All received 5FU- or capecitabine-based treatment without FP preemptive dose adaptation based on DPD status. NGS sequencing of germline DNA was performed by the Integragen company on a NovaSeq6000™ using a capture approach (Twist Bioscience®). In silico predictions were based on CADD, UMD-Predictor and Human Splicing Finder systems.

Results

Sequencing fulfilled quality control criteria for 3,471 DNA samples. DPYD sequencing identified 138 coding and 24,738 intronic variants, including 35 and 14,682 new ones, respectively. 35.1% of patients carried at least one known coding variant (4.9% with 2) other than the 4 consensual ones (prevalence 6.2 %). In silico analyses predicted 41 coding variants as deleterious and 6 as probably deleterious, while 4 intronic variants (at least one carried by 1.6% of patients) were predicted to impact splicing. Among the 51 deleterious/probably deleterious variants, 9 were novel polymorphisms, each identified in one patient (heterozygous): 5 deleterious missenses (L176P, C671R, R783H, A818T and C953S), one nonsense (L165*), one probably deleterious missense (V637M), and 2 intronic variants disrupting a donor site (c.850+5G>A) or a branch point (c.40-23C>T).

Conclusions

This is the largest series of patients with full DPYD sequencing reported so far. Less than 0.25% of patients carried a new deleterious DPYD coding variant and 1.6% carried a potentially functional intronic variant. Meta-analysis of their impact on toxicity is ongoing.

Clinical trial identification

PROSPERO number CRD42017058148.

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

The authors.

Funding

French Cancer Institute (INCa) and Ministry of Health. PRT-K 18-064 grant (FUSAFE-2 project).

Disclosure

Y.A. Wettergren: Financial Interests, Personal, Other, Honoraria for congress participation: Isofol Medical AB; Financial Interests, Institutional, Funding, Funding of research: Isofol Medical AB. M. Schwab: Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker: ALL Akademie, CED Service GmbH, Österreichische Apothekerkammer; Financial Interests, Personal, Expert Testimony: Research Impact Fund Committee (RIF), Research Grant Council (RCG), Hong Kong, German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), EU Horizon 2020; Financial Interests, Personal, Advisory Board: Agena Bioscience, German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF); Financial Interests, Personal, Other, Editor-in-Chief: Pharmacogenetics & Genomics, Drug Research; Financial Interests, Personal, Other, Section Editor PGx & Personalized Medicine: Genome Medicine; Financial Interests, Personal, Other, Editor of Special Issue: Journal of Personalized Medicine; Financial Interests, Institutional, Invited Speaker: Green Cross WellBeing Co. Ltd., Gilead Sciences Inc., CORAT Therapeutics GmbH; Financial Interests, Institutional, Research Grant: Robert Bosch GmbH, Syneos Health, CHORDOMAFoundation. S.P. Ackland: Financial Interests, Institutional, Invited Speaker, SOLSTICE trial, local PI, reimbursement for patient recruitment: Servier; Non-Financial Interests, Leadership Role, Cancer Advisory Panel Chair: Ramsay Healthcare. B. Jennings: Financial Interests, Personal, Full or part-time Employment: University of East Anglia, Norwich Medical School; Non-Financial Interests, Personal, Advisory Board: Academy of Medical Royal Colleges & Medical School Council. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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