Abstract

BackgroundAdenocarcinoma of the rete testis (AORT) is an extremely rare malignant tumor with poor prognosis and limited responsiveness to traditional chemotherapy. Few previous studies have focused on the molecular mechanisms underlying therapy resistance in AORT and further scrutiny is required to enable searches for targeted drugs to guide treatment selection.Case presentationThe current case concerns a 55-year-old man with AORT who presented with isolated bone metastasis at initial diagnosis and experienced rapid disease progression after multi-line platinum-based combination chemotherapy. Next-generation sequencing revealed a novel somatic lysine methyltransferase 2C (KMT2C) c.5605 T > C mutation in exon 36 with an abundance of 49.27%. The patient received antiangiogenic drug treatment for 2 months but this was discontinued due to unacceptable anorexia and nausea. He survived for 12 months after diagnosis.ConclusionA potential correlation between AORT primary multi-drug resistance and KMT2C mutations is implied. Further studies are needed to determine the efficacy of PARP1/2 inhibitors for tumors with KMT2C mutations.

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