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TRK Inhibition with Entrectinib in Metastatic Salivary Secretory Carcinoma (SC): A Case Report

Matthew Scott Ernst, John T. Lysack, Martin Hyrcza, Shamir Chandarana, Desirée Hao

2022Current Oncology13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

NTRK gene fusions are rare oncogenic driver mutations that can be found in a broad range of neoplasms. In secretory carcinoma (SC), ETV6-NTRK3 gene fusion is seen in a majority of the cases and represents a druggable target for patients with advanced disease in the absence of a currently accepted standard of care. In our case, we describe a patient with recurrent, metastatic SC treated with first line entrectinib with clinically meaningful, durable ongoing response after 49 months. The patient experienced grade 1 fatigue, dysgeusia, skin sensitivity, arthralgias, an increase in serum creatinine, and weight-gain as well as grade 2 hypotension which resolved after a dose reduction. Entrectinib is a well-tolerated treatment with the potential for durable responses and TRK inhibition should be considered the standard of care in SC and other NTRK gene fusion-positive advanced neoplasms without acceptable alternative treatment options.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineTrk receptorDysgeusiaInternal medicineOncologyCancerETV6PathologyAdverse effectGeneReceptorChemistryBiochemistryNeurotrophinChromosomal translocationSalivary Gland Tumors Diagnosis and TreatmentEar and Head TumorsHead and Neck Surgical Oncology