San Francisco, California — January 8, 2026 — Leads & Copy —
Tempus AI, Inc. (NASDAQ: TEM) has announced that eight abstracts have been accepted for presentation at the 2026 ASCO® Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium, held January 8–10 in San Francisco, California.
The research highlights Tempus’ commitment to advancing progress in gastrointestinal cancers and demonstrates the power of utilizing its multimodal database to uncover novel insights in oncology, according to Ezra Cohen, MD, Chief Medical Officer of Oncology at Tempus.
The studies show how Tempus’ de-identified clinical and molecular data can be used to better characterize tumors, identify new biomarkers, and in some cases, find patient populations that may benefit from targeted therapies across a variety of GI cancers, Cohen said.
Tempus will highlight its latest scientific and clinical research findings via the following poster presentations:
Genomic Profiling of Epithelial Neoplasms of the Appendix: Insights Across Histological Subtypes and Histological Grades
Tempus Lens was utilized to analyze de-identified clinical genomic, and transcriptomic information for patients diagnosed with different subtypes of appendiceal epithelial neoplasms (AENs). AENs showed unique DNA alterations by histological subtype, with mutations occurring most frequently in KRAS, TP53, SMAD4, and GNAS. Grade 2 mucinous adenocarcinoma closely resembled Grade 1, not Grade 3, in survival and genomics, supporting a three-tier grading system over a high-grade (G2/G3) grouping in this subtype. Furthermore, patients with KRAS/GNAS co-mutations had better survival and a favorable immune profile in the AEN population overall, supporting further immunotherapy research in this disease.
Impact of Claudin-1 (CLDN1) Expression on Molecular Correlates and Clinical Outcomes in Patients with Advanced Biliary Tract Cancers (BTCs)
Researchers examined the molecular and clinical correlates of CLDN1 expression in a real-world cohort of patients with advanced BTCs across subtypes. They analyzed a cohort of patients with BTC who received xT and xR testing. High CLDN1 expression was associated with immune cell infiltration in this cohort of advanced BTC with improved survival in pts treated with 1L chemo+IO. Furthermore, relevant molecular alterations in BTC differed with high vs low CLDN1 expression. Larger studies are warranted to evaluate the predictive and prognostic role of CLDN1 in BTC to identify novel therapeutic strategies.
Molecular and Immune Landscape of Early-Onset Versus Average-Onset Well-Differentiated Enteropancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors
The authors sought to characterize the molecular and immune landscape of early (EO)- versus average-onset (AO) pancreatic (pNETs) and small intestinal NETs (siNETs) by leveraging Tempus Lens. EO pNETs exhibited a significantly lower prevalence of KRAS, TP53, SMAD4 and RB1 alterations and a higher prevalence of LRP1B alterations compared to AO pNETs. EO siNETs showed a significantly higher prevalence of PAX5 and HDAC2 alterations. EO-pNETs were significantly enriched in certain gene sets (VEGF, hedgehog signaling, myogenesis, apical junction) and depleted in others (MYC, E2F, DNA repair, G2M checkpoint), and showed enriched infiltration of M2 macrophages. The findings highlight key molecular and immune differences between age sub-groups in enteropancreatic NETs, suggesting that age at diagnosis may be an important determinant of tumor biology.
Advanced Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma Outcomes in Patients with DDR Deficiencies Outside of BRCA1/2 and PALB2
Tempus Lens was used to analyze de-identified clinical, genomic and transcriptomic data for patients diagnosed with advanced pancreatic adenocarcinomas with mutations in the DNA damage repair (DDR) pathway other than BRCA1/2 and PALB2. Researchers compared the outcomes of patients treated with platinum- versus non-platinum chemotherapy regimens in the first line (1L). Patients treated with platinum regimens showed a trend toward improved survival starting around 5 months of treatment (median rwOS 11.7 vs 9.8 months, p=0.471), but this was not statistically significant.
Multiomic Analysis and Oncologic Outcomes in Pancreatic Cancer by PIN1 Expression
Researchers characterized PIN1 expression and its impact on the TIME and survival in PDAC patients sequenced with xT and/or xR. Results demonstrated that PIN1 RNA expression was higher in NLP disease sites and is associated with pro- and anti-tumor immune subsets and a favorable OS, which is contrary to previously published literature.
Molecular Characterization of Resected Non-Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer (PC) Based on KRAS Status
This study assessed whether next-generation sequencing (NGS)–based tumor profiling can guide tailoring of CT strategies in resectable pancreatic cancer (PC). Tempus Lens was used to identify PC patients sequenced with xT or xF assays. KRAS mutations did not predict survival benefit from mFOLFIRINOX or gem-nab in resected PC, however researchers identified distinct profiles of potentially targetable co-alterations in KRAS mutated vs. KRAS WT patients. These findings may suggest the integration of genomic profiling in clinical trials to develop new biomarker-driven targeted strategies in the early stage disease.
Transcriptomic Signatures of RAD51 and GATA6 Predict Improved Real-World Overall Survival with Platinum Therapy in BRCA/PALB2 Wild-Type Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer
Researchers used Tempus Lens to identify and analyze mPC pts with wildtype somatic BRCA1/2 and PALB2 who had Tempus xT DNA and xR RNA testing. In BRCA/PALB2wt mPC, transcriptomic profiling identified low RAD51 and high GATA6 expression as predictors for improved rwOS when treated with 1L platinum therapy. Integrating these biomarkers may improve development of DNA-damaging therapies beyond canonically defined HRD.
Coupling Tumor Genomics, Whole Transcriptome Sequencing, and Patient Outcomes to Define the Tumor Microenvironment in Receptor Tyrosine Amplified Gastrointestinal Cancers: Analysis from 24,598 Cases
To further map TME features to tumor genomics across gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma, colorectal carcinoma, and cholangiocarcinoma, researchers utilized Tempus Lens to analyze patients with RTK-amplified and RTK non-amplified GI cancers, leveraging xT and xR testing. RTK amplifications were present in approximately 10% of all samples, consistent with known tumor-specific prevalences. These RTK-amplified tumors were also found to be enriched for MYC and CCNE1 genomic alterations and were associated with altered expression of immunosuppressive regulatory genes, including IDO1, TIM-3, and LAG3.
Ezra Cohen, MD, Chief Medical Officer of Oncology at Tempus
Source: Tempus AI, Inc.
