Clinical utility of a protein-based oncopanel in patients with end-stage head and neck cancer.
Johannes DoescherStephanie E WeissingerStefan S SchönsteinerCatharina LissonLars BullingerThomas Fe BarthFrank LeithäuserUrs Mueller-RichterSimon LabanThomas K HoffmannPeter MöllerJochen K LennerzPatrick J SchulerPublished in: Immunotherapy (2019)
Aim: In a prospective clinical initiative, we selected heavily pretreated head and neck carcinoma patients and assessed the clinical utility of a protein-based oncopanel for identification of potential targetable markers. Patients & methods: Tumor samples of 45 patients were evaluated using a 12-marker immunohistochemistry panel. The primary end point was the prevalence of potentially actionable markers. Results: At least one expressed marker in each case could be identified. We noted a high prevalence of EGFR (80%, 39/45) and MET (57.4%, 28/45). Three patients received oncopanel-based therapy with variable results. Conclusion: Despite the limited number of treated subjects, oncopanel analysis in end-stage head and neck cancer is operationally and technically feasible. Combination with targeted next generation sequencing might provide additional therapy options.