Cold Spring Harbor molecular case studies, volume 9, issue 2, pages mcs.a006249

Single-cell profiling of multiple myeloma reveals molecular response to FGFR3 inhibitor despite clinical progression

Danielle C Croucher 1, 2
Anup J. Devasia 1, 2
Dor D Abelman 1, 2
Ali Mahdipour Shirayeh 1, 2
Zhihua Li 2
Natalie Erdmann 1, 2
Rodger E. Tiedemann 1, 2
Trevor J. Pugh 1, 2
Suzanne Trudel 2, 3
Show full list: 9 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-01-13
scimago Q2
SJR0.801
CiteScore3.2
Impact factor1.8
ISSN23732873, 23732865
General Medicine
Abstract

Genomic characterization of cancer has enabled identification of numerous molecular targets, which has led to significant advances in personalized medicine. However, with few exceptions, precision medicine approaches in the plasma cell malignancy multiple myeloma (MM) have had limited success, likely owing to the subclonal nature of molecular targets in this disease. Targeted therapies against FGFR3 have been under development for the past decade in the hopes of targeting aberrant FGFR3 activity in MM. FGFR3 activation results from the recurrent transforming event of t(4;14) found in ∼15% of MM patients, as well as secondaryFGFR3mutations in this subgroup. To evaluate the effectiveness of targeting FGFR3 in MM, we undertook a phase 2 clinical trial evaluating the small-molecule FGFR1–4 inhibitor, erdafitinib, in relapsed/refractory myeloma patients with or withoutFGFR3mutations (NCT02952573). Herein, we report on a single t(4;14) patient enrolled on this study who was identified to have a subclonalFGFR3stop-loss deletion. Although this individual eventually progressed on study and succumbed to their disease, the intended molecular response was revealed through an extensive molecular characterization of the patient's tumor at baseline and on treatment using single-cell genomics. We identified elimination of theFGFR3-mutant subclone after treatment and expansion of a preexisting clone with loss of Chromosome 17p. Altogether, our study highlights the utility of single-cell genomics in targeted trials as they can reveal molecular mechanisms that underlie sensitivity and resistance. This in turn can guide more personalized and targeted therapeutic approaches, including those that involve FGFR3-targeting therapies.

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