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Clinical utility of plasma-based digital next-generation sequencing in patients with advance-stage lung adenocarcinomas with insufficient tumor samples for tissue genotyping

Authors :
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
European Commission
Zugazagoitia, Jon
Ramos, Inmaculada
Trigo, José Manuel
Palka, M.
Gómez-Rueda, Ana
Jantus-Lewintre, Eloisa
Camps, Carlos
Isla, María Dolores
Iranzo, P.
Ponce-Aix, Santiago
García-Campelo, R.
Provencio, Mariano
Franco, F.
Bernabé Caro, Reyes
Juan-Vidal, Óscar
Felip, Enriqueta
Castro, Javier de
Sánchez-Torres, J. M.
Faul, Iris
Lanman, R. B.
Garrido, Pilar
Paz-Ares, Luis
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
European Commission
Zugazagoitia, Jon
Ramos, Inmaculada
Trigo, José Manuel
Palka, M.
Gómez-Rueda, Ana
Jantus-Lewintre, Eloisa
Camps, Carlos
Isla, María Dolores
Iranzo, P.
Ponce-Aix, Santiago
García-Campelo, R.
Provencio, Mariano
Franco, F.
Bernabé Caro, Reyes
Juan-Vidal, Óscar
Felip, Enriqueta
Castro, Javier de
Sánchez-Torres, J. M.
Faul, Iris
Lanman, R. B.
Garrido, Pilar
Paz-Ares, Luis
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

[Background] Approximately 30% of tumor biopsies from patients with advanced-stage lung adenocarcinomas yield insufficient tissue for successful molecular subtyping. We have analyzed the clinical utility of next-generation sequencing (NGS) of cell-free circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in patients with inadequate tumor samples for tissue genotyping. [Patients and methods] We conducted the study in a multi-institutional prospective cohort of clinically unselected patients with advanced-stage lung adenocarcinomas with insufficient tissue for EGFR, ALK or ROS1 genotyping across 12 Spanish institutions (n = 93). ctDNA NGS was carried out by Guardant Health (Guardant360, Redwood City, CA), using a hybrid-capture-based 73-gene panel. Variants were deemed actionable if they were part of the OncoKB precision oncology knowledge database and classified in four levels of actionability based on their clinical or preclinical evidence for drug response. [Results] Eighty-three out of 93 patients (89%) had detectable levels of ctDNA. Potentially actionable level 1–4 genomic alterations were detected in 53 cases (57%), of which 13 (14%) had level 1–2A alterations (Food and Drug Administration-approved and standard-care biomarkers according to lung cancer guidelines). Frequencies of each genomic alteration in ctDNA were consistent with those observed in unselected pulmonary adenocarcinomas. The majority of the patients (62%), particularly those with actionable alterations (87%), had more than one pathogenic variant in ctDNA. The median turnaround time to genomic results was 13 days. Twelve patients (13%) received genotype-matched therapies based on ctDNA results, deriving the expected clinical benefit. Patients with co-occurring pathogenic alterations had a significantly shorter median overall survival as compared with patients without co-occurring pathogenic alteration (multivariate hazard ratio = 5.35, P = 0.01). [Conclusion] Digital NGS of ctDNA in lung cancers with insufficient tumor

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1286547887
Document Type :
Electronic Resource