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Data from Functional Precision Medicine Provides Clinical Benefit in Advanced Aggressive Hematologic Cancers and Identifies Exceptional Responders

Authors :
Philipp B. Staber
Berend Snijder
Giulio Superti-Furga
Ingrid Simonitsch-Klupp
Niklas Zojer
Christoph C. Zielinski
Dominik Wolf
Cora Waldstein
Stefan Vogt
Katrina Vanura
Emiel van der Kouwe
Peter Valent
Renate Thalhammer
Ismet Srndic
Wolfgang R. Sperr
Cathrin Skrabs
Christian Sillaber
Edgar Selzer
Ilse Schwarzinger
Ann-Sofie Schmolke
Ana-Iris Schiefer
Julius Salamon
Reinhard Ruckser
Robin Ristl
Markus Raderer
Gerald W. Prager
Edit Porpaczy
Alexander Pichler
Michael Panny
Leopold Öhler
Katharina Ocko
Thomas Noesslinger
Peter Neumeister
Leonhard Müllauer
Katsuhiro Miura
Olaf Merkel
Elisabeth Menschel
Marius E. Mayerhoefer
Simone Lubowitzki
Trang Le
Stefan Kubicek
Gerhard Krajnik
Nikolaus Krall
Barbara Kiesewetter
Lukas Kenner
Lukas Kazianka
Ulrich Jaeger
Georg Hopfinger
Mir Alireza Hoda
Daniel Heintel
Tim Heinemann
Alexander W. Hauswirth
Bernd Lorenz Hartmann
Marcus Hacker
Wolfgang Gstöttner
Hildegard T. Greinix
Klaus Geissler
Alexander Gaiger
Maurizio Forte
Verena Felsleitner-Hauer
Ruth Exner
Harald Esterbauer
Martin Erl
Ruth Eichner
Sandra Eder
Michael Bergmann
Günther Bayer
Gregory I. Vladimer
Tea Pemovska
Christoph Kornauth
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Personalized medicine aims to match the right drug with the right patient by using specific features of the individual patient's tumor. However, current strategies of personalized therapy matching provide treatment opportunities for less than 10% of patients with cancer. A promising method may be drug profiling of patient biopsy specimens with single-cell resolution to directly quantify drug effects. We prospectively tested an image-based single-cell functional precision medicine (scFPM) approach to guide treatments in 143 patients with advanced aggressive hematologic cancers. Fifty-six patients (39%) were treated according to scFPM results. At a median follow-up of 23.9 months, 30 patients (54%) demonstrated a clinical benefit of more than 1.3-fold enhanced progression-free survival compared with their previous therapy. Twelve patients (40% of responders) experienced exceptional responses lasting three times longer than expected for their respective disease. We conclude that therapy matching by scFPM is clinically feasible and effective in advanced aggressive hematologic cancers.Significance:This is the first precision medicine trial using a functional assay to instruct n-of-one therapies in oncology. It illustrates that for patients lacking standard therapies, high-content assay-based scFPM can have a significant value in clinical therapy guidance based on functional dependencies of each patient's cancer.See related commentary by Letai, p. 290.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 275

Details

ISSN :
21598290
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a9887042c05486a909c745cd96689d6c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.c.6549464.v1