Abstract

Objective: To present the main genetic polymorphisms that have been associated with the response of head and neck carcinoma to cetuximab. Method: A non-exhaustive review of articles published in the period from January 2000 to December 2022 was carried out, for this purpose the Medline (via Pubmed) and Science Direct databases were used. The guide for genetic association studies (Q-Genie) was used to evaluate the methodological quality of the included articles. Results: A total of 206 articles were identified, of which 12 met the criteria for the final analysis. Several polymorphisms were reported, such as: EGFR-R521K (AA/GA), FcγRIIIa (158VV) and FcγRIIa (131HH), KRAS-LCS6 (TG/GG), AKT2:rs8100018, PTEN: rs12569998 in its mutated variants, HIF- 1α (CT/TT) and XRCC5 (GG/AA) that were associated with survival variables, risk of progression, times to disease progression, as well as skin toxicity. Conclusions: Several polymorphisms can be associated with the response of head and neck carcinoma to treatment with cetuximab, being EGFR-R521K and FcγR IIIa-V158F the most studied. The enormous uncertainty of the results obtained does not allow firm conclusions to be reached about the influence of genetic polymorphisms on the response to cetuximab; however, they can become pharmacogenetic biomarkers in clinical practice as a valuable tool in personalized medicine, to predict drug response. This requires carrying out controlled trials with strata by genotype, with random assignment of treatment and the analysis of other variables with known prognostic value. Keywords: genetic polymorphism; cetuximab; head and neck neoplasms

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