Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and treatment rationale of Hürthle cell carcinoma (HCC) following a patient with progressive and metastatic HCC. HCC was recently shown to harbor a distinct genetic make-up and the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and phosphatidylinositol 3-kiase (PI3K)/AKT signaling pathways are potential targets for anti-cancer agents in the management of recurrent HCC. The presence or absence of gene variants can give a rationale for targeted therapies that could be made available in the context of drug repurposing trials. Methods: Treatment included everolimus, sorafenib, nintedanib, lenvatinib, and panitumumab. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) of metastatic tumor material obtained before administration of the last drug, was performed. We subsequently evaluated the rationale and efficacy of panitumumab in thyroid cancer and control cell lines after epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulation and treatment with panitumumab using immunofluorescent Western blot analysis. EGF receptor (EGFR) quantification was performed using flow cytometry. Results: WGS revealed a near-homozygous genome (NHG) and a somatic homozygous TSC1 variant, that was absent in the primary tumor. In the absence of RAS variants, panitumumab showed no real-life efficacy. This might be explained by high constitutive AKT signaling in the two thyroid cancer cell lines with NHG, with panitumumab only being a potent inhibitor of pEGFR in all cancer cell lines tested. Conclusions: In progressive HCC, several treatment options outside or inside clinical trials are available. WGS of metastatic tumors might direct the timing of therapy. Unlike other cancers, the absence of RAS variants seems to provide insufficient justification of single-agent panitumumab administration in HCC cases harboring a near-homozygous genome.

Highlights

  • Differentiated non-medullary thyroid cancers (DTC), account for the vast majority (~95%) of thyroid cancers

  • Possible treatment options for recurrent Hürthle cell carcinoma (HCC) are illustrated by a 40-year-old male patient with a left sided widely invasive HCC (5.3 cm in diameter) with extensive vaso-invasion

  • Five months after this radio-iodide therapy, Positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) showed vitality of these bone metastases with rising thyroglobulin, which comply with radio-iodide refractory disease

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Summary

Introduction

Differentiated non-medullary thyroid cancers (DTC), account for the vast majority (~95%) of thyroid cancers. These can be divided into main histologic types papillary (PTC), follicular thyroid carcinoma (FTC) including subtype variants, and Hürthle cell carcinoma (HCC) [1,2]. Thyrotropin suppression therapy, which cures the majority of DTC cases [3]. Of cases become recurrent or metastatic, of which 26% to 60% [4,5,6] progress to RAI refractory status. The refractory DTC cases form a major source of thyroid cancer-related deaths with a 10-year survival of less than 10% [5,7]. Of the recurrent cases, a substantial share consists of BRAF mutated

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