Original Article


KRAS status and clinical outcome in metastatic colorectal cancer patients treated with first-line FOLFOX chemotherapy

Neelesh Sharma, Maher Saifo, Ila R Tamaskar, Ramkumar Bhuvaneswari, Terry Mashtare, Marwan Fakih

Abstract

Background: Two previous first-line studies showed an improved trend in response rate (RR) and progression free survival (PFS) in metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) patients with KRAS mutation. Others have reported a worsened outlook for metastatic CRC patients with KRAS mutation and a higher likelihood of metastatic disease to the lungs. In this study, we aimed to address the impact of KRAS on the pattern of metastatic disease at presentation and on RR and PFS with first-line 5-fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX) chemotherapy.
Methods: Patients with CRC who underwent KRAS testing using DxS assay at Roswell Park Cancer Institute (RPCI) were identified. Patients with metastatic CRC treated with first-line FOLFOX +/- bevacizumab were assessed for response and survival using RECIST 1.1 guidelines. A two-sided Fisher\'s exact test was used to determine the statistical significance.
Results: 181 patients with metastatic CRC and KRAS testing were identified. 83/181 patients were treated with FOLFOX (+/- bevacizumab) in the first-line setting at RPCI and were evaluable as per study guidelines. KRAS mutation (MT) occurred in 40.31% cases. There was no difference in organ-metastases distribution, RR (56.60% in KRAS wild-type (WT) and 50% in KRAS mutant) or PFS (9.3 months KRAS WT and 8.7 months in KRAS MT) based on KRAS status.
Conclusion: In this single institute study, our findings do not support any predictive role for KRAS-MT in terms of response to FOLFOX first-line chemotherapy, or in terms of sites of metastatic disease at mCRC presentation.

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