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PIK3CA mutations in plasma circulating tumor DNA predict survival and treatment outcomes in patients with advanced cancers

Authors :
Bryan K. Kee
Ecaterina Elena Dumbrava
Siquing Fu
David R. Fogelman
Kimberly Koenig
Abha Adat
S.G. Call
E. S. Kopetz
Filip Janku
Haojie Huang
David S. Hong
Sarina Anne Piha-Paul
A.L. Stuckett
Kiran Madwani
Carlos H. Barcenas
Vivek Subbiah
Apostolia-Maria Tsimberidou
S. L. Moulder
Funda Meric-Bernstam
Aung Naing
Daniel D. Karp
Source :
ESMO Open
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Oncogenic mutations in PIK3CA are prevalent in diverse cancers and can be targeted with inhibitors of the phosphoinositide-3-kinase/protein kinase B/mammalian target of rapamycin (PI3K/AKT/mTOR) pathway. Analysis of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) provides a minimally invasive approach to detect clinically actionable PIK3CA mutations. Patients and methods We analyzed PIK3CA hotspot mutation frequency by droplet digital PCR (QX 200; BioRad) using 16 ng of unamplified plasma-derived cell-free DNA from 68 patients with advanced solid tumors (breast cancer, n = 41; colorectal cancer, n = 13; other tumor types, n = 14). Results quantified as variant allele frequencies (VAFs) were compared with previous testing of archival tumor tissue and with patient outcomes. Results Of 68 patients, 58 (85%) had PIK3CA mutations in tumor tissue and 43 (74%) PIK3CA mutations in ctDNA with an overall concordance of 72% (49/68, κ = 0.38). In a subset analysis, which excluded samples from 26 patients known not to have disease progression at the time of sample collection, we found an overall concordance of 91% (38/42; κ = 0.74). PIK3CA-mutated ctDNA VAF of ≤8.5% (5% trimmed mean) showed a longer median survival compared with patients with a higher VAF (15.9 versus 9.4 months; 95% confidence interval 6.7-17.1 months; P = 0.014). Longitudinal analysis of ctDNA in 18 patients with serial plasma collections (range 2-22 time points, median 5) showed that those with a decrease in PIK3CA VAF had a longer time to treatment failure (TTF) compared with patients with an increase or no change (10.7 versus 2.6 months; P = 0.048). Conclusions Detection of PIK3CA mutations in ctDNA is concordant with testing of archival tumor tissue. Low quantity of PIK3CA-mutant ctDNA is associated with longer survival and a decrease in PIK3CA-mutant ctDNA on therapy is associated with longer TTF.<br />Highlights • Testing for PIK3CA mutations in ctDNA is concordant with testing of tumor tissue. • High PIK3CA-mutant abundance in ctDNA was associated with shorter survival. • Increasing PIK3CA-mutant abundance in serial blood samples was associated with shorter TTF. • Longitudinal monitoring of PIK3CA-mutant ctDNA tracked with cancer clinical course.

Details

ISSN :
20597029
Volume :
6
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ESMO open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec5bcfe946ed471c598f2b1cc722a2f1