Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical OncologyClinical Trial, Phase III
10 May 2025
Relapsed high-risk neuroblastomas (NBLs) are enriched for targetable mutations in and RAS-MAPK pathways, yet the prognostic effect of these aberrations and relevance of subclonal mutations at diagnosis remain undefined. We describe the spectrum and clinical significance of clonal and subclonal pathogenic alterations in high-risk NBL.
We developed a focused high-risk NBL sequencing panel including , , , , , , , and genes for ultra-deep sequencing and applied this assay to 242 pretherapy tumors from patients enrolled on the phase III trial Children's Oncology Group ANBL0532. We assessed the effect of clonal and subclonal mutations on event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS).
-activating mutations occurred in 21.5% of tumors (n = 52, 30 clonal, 22 subclonal), and 3.3% (n = 8) showed amplification. EFS and OS for patients with any -aberrant tumor were inferior to patients with wild-type (WT) tumors (5-year OS 37.7% 66.3%; hazard ratio [HR], 1.992; = .0007). EFS and OS for patients with tumors harboring activating mutations ≥5% variant allele frequency (VAF) were inferior to WT (5-year OS 37.7% 66.3%; HR, 1.966; = .0041). The 5-year EFS and OS for patients with -amplified tumors were 25.0%. RAS pathway mutations occurred in 7.9% of tumors (n = 19; four clonal, 15 subclonal), with EFS and OS for those with VAF ≥5% inferior to RAS-WT patients (5-year OS 19.1% 60.0%; HR, 3.021; = .0168).
Ultra-deep sequencing of high-risk NBLs demonstrates that oncogenic aberrations are more prevalent at diagnosis than previously recognized. and RAS pathway aberrations confer inferior outcomes in patients treated with contemporary therapy, emphasizing the need for novel therapeutic approaches.
The following represents disclosure information provided by authors of this manuscript. All relationships are considered compensated unless otherwise noted. Relationships are self-held unless noted. I = Immediate Family Member, Inst = My Institution. Relationships may not relate to the subject matter of this manuscript. For more information about ASCO's conflict of interest policy, please refer to www.asco.org/rwc or ascopubs.org/jco/authors/author-center. Open Payments is a public database containing information reported by companies about payments made to US-licensed physicians (Open Payments).
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