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Actionable Genomic Alterations in Prostate Cancer Among Black and White United States Veterans

Authors :
Luca F Valle
Nicholas G Nickols
Ryan Hausler
Patrick R Alba
Tori Anglin-Foote
Cristina Perez
Kosj Yamoah
Brent S Rose
Michael J Kelley
Scott L DuVall
Isla P Garraway
Kara N Maxwell
Julie A Lynch
Source :
The oncologist, vol 28, iss 6, Oncologist
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

Black Veterans have higher a incidence of localized and metastatic prostate cancer compared to White Veterans yet are underrepresented in reports of frequencies of somatic and germline alterations. This retrospective analysis of somatic and putative germline alterations was conducted in a large cohort of Veterans with prostate cancer (N = 835 Black, 1613 White) who underwent next generation sequencing through the VA Precision Oncology Program, which facilitates molecular testing for Veterans with metastatic cancer. No differences were observed in gene alterations for FDA approved targetable therapies (13.5% in Black Veterans vs. 15.5% in White Veterans, P = .21), nor in any potentially actionable alterations (25.5% vs. 28.7%, P =.1). Black Veterans had higher rates of BRAF (5.5% vs. 2.6%, P < .001) alterations, White Veterans TMPRSS2 fusions (27.2% vs. 11.7%, P < .0001). Putative germline alteration rates were higher in White Veterans (12.0% vs. 6.1%, P < .0001). Racial disparities in outcome are unlikely attributable to acquired somatic alterations in actionable pathways.

Details

ISSN :
1549490X and 10837159
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Oncologist
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ef79601709d427ae0587dbcac398b538