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A mismatch repair-deficient and HPV-negative anorectal squamous cell carcinoma.

Invasive primary squamous cell carcinomas involving the anorectal region are challenging to manage. Microsatellite instability has been shown to impact clinical courses and outcomes of patients affected by many types of carcinomas. To the best of our knowledge, there are no reports on microsatellite instability in anorectal squamous cell carcinomas. Here, we report a HPV-negative anorectal squamous cell carcinoma which, despite cisplatin-based chemoradiation therapy, showed progression. Interestingly, after identification of its mismatch repair-deficiency (MLH1/PMS2-absent, MSH2/MSH6-intact), pembrolizumab-based immunotherapy was initiated, leading to a marked clinical response. This unique case illustrates that microsatellite instability testing and immunotherapy targeting immune checkpoint blockade should be considered for managing anorectal squamous cell carcinomas that fail conventional chemoradiation therapies or when patients are non-surgical candidates. This report provides the first evidence of microsatellite instability in anorectal squamous cell carcinomas and supports the role for microsatellite instability testing in this cancer type to optimize patient management.

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