Abstract

BackgroundMalignant mixed Mullerian tumors of endometrial (MMMT-E) and ovarian (MMMT-O) origin are associated with poor prognosis. Suggestively epithelial-driven tumors, their treatment has shifted from anthracycline or ifosfamide-based towards taxane-based chemotherapy. It remains unclear whether this change associates with better outcomes.Patients and methodsA conjoined Australian and Swiss patient cohort of MMMT-E (N = 103) and MMMT-O (N = 17) was compared to patients with adenocarcinoma of the endometrium (EC, N = 172) and ovary (OC, N = 189). Clinicopathological characteristics, FIGO stage, first-line treatment, and patient outcomes were analyzed. The generated hypothesis was verified in an US-American cohort with high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC, N = 1290) and MMMT-O (N = 450) using immunohistochemistry and next-generation sequencing.ResultsEarly stage I/II MMMT-E showed a survival plateau after 2.5 years, with no recurrence or death observed afterwards. Relapse-free survival was significantly worse in MMMT-E treated with platinum/taxanes (P = 0.024) compared to non-taxane regimen. Hypothesizing that also MMMT-O might benefit from an adjuvant non-paclitaxel regimen, a second independent cohort of MMMT-O and HGSOC patients was examined. p53 mutations dominated in both cancers with comparable frequency. PI3KCA and KRAS mutations were less frequent: they were more frequent in MMMT-O than in HGSOC (P = 0.015 and P = 0.018, respectively). MMMT-O responded better to a combination of carboplatin with anthracyclines than with taxanes (73.9% vs. 39.4%).ConclusionEarly stage I/II MMMT-E patients have excellent prognosis if no recurrence has appeared within the first 2.5 years. In MMMT-E, platinum/anthracycline or ifosfamide regimen associated with better outcomes than platinum/taxanes regimens. This might also apply to MMMT-O.

Highlights

  • Carcinosarcoma or malignant mixed Mullerian tumors (MMMT) are biphasic tumors that contain malignant mesodermal and epithelial components, in contrast to sarcomas, which contain exclusively malignant mesodermal elements (Kernochan and Garcia 2009)

  • As Malignant mixed Mullerian tumors of endometrial (MMMT-E) and MMMT-O derive from different organs, they are not managed identical but due to the tissue of origin

  • One study suggests that MMMT-O and MMMT-E are different diseases in terms of their genetic landscape

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Summary

Introduction

Carcinosarcoma or malignant mixed Mullerian tumors (MMMT) are biphasic tumors that contain malignant mesodermal and epithelial components, in contrast to sarcomas, which contain exclusively malignant mesodermal elements (Kernochan and Garcia 2009). Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology (2020) 146:695–704 consist of carcinoma elements (Silverberg et al 1990). Due to their rareness, there are no large epidemiological studies available and data are in general inconclusive. Epithelial-driven tumors, their treatment has shifted from anthracycline or ifosfamide-based towards taxane-based chemotherapy. It remains unclear whether this change associates with better outcomes. In MMMT-E, platinum/anthracycline or ifosfamide regimen associated with better outcomes than platinum/taxanes regimens.

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