Abstract

457 Background: HER2/ERBB2 is a known therapeutic target in gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma (GEAC). HER3/ERBB3 is an emerging target in a variety of cancers but less defined in GEAC. Insights into the genomic and immunologic landscape of ERBB2/ERBB3 alterations (ERBB2/3-alt) are required to develop effective treatments. Methods: We analyzed de-identified data from 2,050 GEAC patient tumor samples which underwent next generation sequencing with the Tempus xT assay (DNA-seq of 648 genes at 500x coverage, full transcriptome RNA-seq). Bivariate analyses were performed to compare demographics, immuno-oncology (IO) biomarkers, and co-mutations between ERBB2/3-alt groups. P-values comparing individual co-mutations between groups were adjusted for false discovery. Results: Overall, 17.8% (365/2050) of tumors harbored an ERBB2 or ERBB3-alt, 3 of which had both and were excluded from analyses. Alterations were defined as pathogenic/likely pathogenic mutations, copy number amplifications (CN amp), or copy number loss (CN loss). Tumors were divided into ERBB2 CN amp (n=252, 12.3%), ERBB2 other (CN loss/mutation) (n=71, 3.5%), ERBB3 CN amp (n=17, 0.8%), ERBB3 other (n=22, 1%), and WT (n=1685, 82%) for both. No differences were observed between groups regarding baseline demographics (age of onset, race, ethnicity) aside from the percentage of females (p=0.002). Significant differences in IO markers and the co-occurring genetic alterations were seen. ERBB3 other (N = 22 mutations - No CN loss) had increased TMB, microsatellite instability high (MSI-H), and median neoantigen tumor burden. Conclusions: ERBB2/ERBB3-alt are associated with significant changes in the tumor microenvironment in GEAC. Co-occurring genetic or immunologic alterations can be exploited to develop effective targeted or immune therapies. [Table: see text]

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