6111 Background: Despite aggressive local therapy, many ACC patients (~50%) develop recurrent and/or metastatic (R/M) disease. However, there is no standard of care or FDA-approved systemic therapy for this population. Based on small phase II trials, mostly including multiple salivary gland histologies, cytotoxic chemotherapy is recommended for symptomatic patients with high tumor burden, but its efficacy and impact on survival in R/M ACC remain unsubstantiated. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted at MD Anderson Cancer Center with an institutional ACC database (N=769). Patients diagnosed with R/M ACC and treated with single-agent or combination palliative-intent chemotherapy were included. The primary endpoints were overall response rate (ORR) and disease control rate (DCR) per RECIST 1.1. Secondary endpoints were median overall survival (mOS) and progression-free survival (mPFS) on chemotherapy for the entire cohort and stratified by growth pattern (solid v non-solid), line of therapy (1 v >2), chemotherapy regimen, and stage at diagnosis (M0 v M1). Results: 48 out of 115 patients who received chemotherapy were evaluated for response per RECIST.Median age at diagnosis was 43.6 years. 56% were male, 79% had M0 stage at diagnosis, 67% had minor salivary gland primary tumors, 52% had solid growth pattern, 31% had non-solid growth pattern, and 54% received first-line chemotherapy. The most common regimens were Platinum/Vinorelbine (38%), Platinum/Taxane (27%) and CAP (15%).The ORR and DCR rates were 12.5% and 56.3% respectively; 6 had partial response, 21 had stable disease, and 21 had progressive disease. The ORR and DCR rates were 20% and 52% for solid and 6.7% and 73.3% for non-solid growth pattern, respectively. The mOS from diagnosis was 7 years (95% CI, 3.5-10.7). The mOS on chemotherapy was 16 months (95% CI, 10.8-24.5). There was a significant difference in mOS between solid and non-solid growth pattern (10.8 v 24.1 months, p=0.015), but not by line of therapy, regimen, or stage at diagnosis. The mPFS on chemotherapy was 4.3 months (95% CI, 2.8-6.3 months). There was a significant difference in mPFS between solid and non-solid growth pattern (4.0 v 7.3 months, p=0.018), but not by line of therapy, regimen, or stage at diagnosis. Conclusions: In this largest to date real-world data on chemotherapy in ACC, response and survival outcomes were lower than historical data. The efficacy of chemotherapy may vary by growth pattern and other patient and tumor factors, which requires further investigation. Given the low ORR and overall slow-growing disease pattern, tumor volumetrics may be better than RECIST to assess treatment benefit.