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Assessment of Clinical Benefit of Integrative Genomic Profiling in Advanced Solid Tumors

IMPORTANCE: Use of next-generation sequencing (NGS) to identify clinically actionable genomic targets has been incorporated into routine clinical practice in the management of advanced solid tumors; however, the clinical utility of this testing remains uncertain. OBJECTIVE: To determine which patien...

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Autores principales: Cobain, Erin F., Wu, Yi-Mi, Vats, Pankaj, Chugh, Rashmi, Worden, Francis, Smith, David C., Schuetze, Scott M., Zalupski, Mark M., Sahai, Vaibhav, Alva, Ajjai, Schott, Anne F., Caram, Megan E. V., Hayes, Daniel F., Stoffel, Elena M., Jacobs, Michelle F., Kumar-Sinha, Chandan, Cao, Xuhong, Wang, Rui, Lucas, David, Ning, Yu, Rabban, Erica, Bell, Janice, Camelo-Piragua, Sandra, Udager, Aaron M., Cieslik, Marcin, Lonigro, Robert J., Kunju, Lakshmi P., Robinson, Dan R., Talpaz, Moshe, Chinnaiyan, Arul M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Association 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7907987/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33630025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamaoncol.2020.7987
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author Cobain, Erin F.
Wu, Yi-Mi
Vats, Pankaj
Chugh, Rashmi
Worden, Francis
Smith, David C.
Schuetze, Scott M.
Zalupski, Mark M.
Sahai, Vaibhav
Alva, Ajjai
Schott, Anne F.
Caram, Megan E. V.
Hayes, Daniel F.
Stoffel, Elena M.
Jacobs, Michelle F.
Kumar-Sinha, Chandan
Cao, Xuhong
Wang, Rui
Lucas, David
Ning, Yu
Rabban, Erica
Bell, Janice
Camelo-Piragua, Sandra
Udager, Aaron M.
Cieslik, Marcin
Lonigro, Robert J.
Kunju, Lakshmi P.
Robinson, Dan R.
Talpaz, Moshe
Chinnaiyan, Arul M.
author_facet Cobain, Erin F.
Wu, Yi-Mi
Vats, Pankaj
Chugh, Rashmi
Worden, Francis
Smith, David C.
Schuetze, Scott M.
Zalupski, Mark M.
Sahai, Vaibhav
Alva, Ajjai
Schott, Anne F.
Caram, Megan E. V.
Hayes, Daniel F.
Stoffel, Elena M.
Jacobs, Michelle F.
Kumar-Sinha, Chandan
Cao, Xuhong
Wang, Rui
Lucas, David
Ning, Yu
Rabban, Erica
Bell, Janice
Camelo-Piragua, Sandra
Udager, Aaron M.
Cieslik, Marcin
Lonigro, Robert J.
Kunju, Lakshmi P.
Robinson, Dan R.
Talpaz, Moshe
Chinnaiyan, Arul M.
author_sort Cobain, Erin F.
collection PubMed
description IMPORTANCE: Use of next-generation sequencing (NGS) to identify clinically actionable genomic targets has been incorporated into routine clinical practice in the management of advanced solid tumors; however, the clinical utility of this testing remains uncertain. OBJECTIVE: To determine which patients derived the greatest degree of clinical benefit from NGS profiling. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Patients in this cohort study underwent fresh tumor biopsy and blood sample collection for genomic profiling of paired tumor and normal DNA (whole-exome or targeted-exome capture with analysis of 1700 genes) and tumor transcriptome (RNA) sequencing. Somatic and germline genomic alterations were annotated and classified according to degree of clinical actionability. Results were returned to treating oncologists. Data were collected from May 1, 2011, to February 28, 2018, and analyzed from May 1, 2011, to April 30, 2020. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Patients’ subsequent therapy and treatment response were extracted from the medical record to determine clinical benefit rate from NGS-directed therapy at 6 months and exceptional responses lasting 12 months or longer. RESULTS: During the study period, NGS was attempted on tumors from 1138 patients and was successful in 1015 (89.2%) (MET1000 cohort) (538 men [53.0%]; mean [SD] age, 57.7 [13.3] years). Potentially clinically actionable genomic alterations were discovered in 817 patients (80.5%). Of these, 132 patients (16.2%) received sequencing-directed therapy, and 49 had clinical benefit (37.1%). Exceptional responses were observed in 26 patients (19.7% of treated patients). Pathogenic germline variants (PGVs) were identified in 160 patients (15.8% of cohort), including 49 PGVs (4.8% of cohort) with therapeutic relevance. For 55 patients with carcinoma of unknown primary origin, NGS identified the primary site in 28 (50.9%), and sequencing-directed therapy in 13 patients resulted in clinical benefit in 7 instances (53.8%), including 5 exceptional responses. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The high rate of therapeutically relevant PGVs identified across diverse cancer types supports a recommendation for directed germline testing in all patients with advanced cancer. The high frequency of therapeutically relevant somatic and germline findings in patients with carcinoma of unknown primary origin and other rare cancers supports the use of comprehensive NGS profiling as a component of standard of care for these disease entities.
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spelling pubmed-79079872021-03-15 Assessment of Clinical Benefit of Integrative Genomic Profiling in Advanced Solid Tumors Cobain, Erin F. Wu, Yi-Mi Vats, Pankaj Chugh, Rashmi Worden, Francis Smith, David C. Schuetze, Scott M. Zalupski, Mark M. Sahai, Vaibhav Alva, Ajjai Schott, Anne F. Caram, Megan E. V. Hayes, Daniel F. Stoffel, Elena M. Jacobs, Michelle F. Kumar-Sinha, Chandan Cao, Xuhong Wang, Rui Lucas, David Ning, Yu Rabban, Erica Bell, Janice Camelo-Piragua, Sandra Udager, Aaron M. Cieslik, Marcin Lonigro, Robert J. Kunju, Lakshmi P. Robinson, Dan R. Talpaz, Moshe Chinnaiyan, Arul M. JAMA Oncol Original Investigation IMPORTANCE: Use of next-generation sequencing (NGS) to identify clinically actionable genomic targets has been incorporated into routine clinical practice in the management of advanced solid tumors; however, the clinical utility of this testing remains uncertain. OBJECTIVE: To determine which patients derived the greatest degree of clinical benefit from NGS profiling. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Patients in this cohort study underwent fresh tumor biopsy and blood sample collection for genomic profiling of paired tumor and normal DNA (whole-exome or targeted-exome capture with analysis of 1700 genes) and tumor transcriptome (RNA) sequencing. Somatic and germline genomic alterations were annotated and classified according to degree of clinical actionability. Results were returned to treating oncologists. Data were collected from May 1, 2011, to February 28, 2018, and analyzed from May 1, 2011, to April 30, 2020. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Patients’ subsequent therapy and treatment response were extracted from the medical record to determine clinical benefit rate from NGS-directed therapy at 6 months and exceptional responses lasting 12 months or longer. RESULTS: During the study period, NGS was attempted on tumors from 1138 patients and was successful in 1015 (89.2%) (MET1000 cohort) (538 men [53.0%]; mean [SD] age, 57.7 [13.3] years). Potentially clinically actionable genomic alterations were discovered in 817 patients (80.5%). Of these, 132 patients (16.2%) received sequencing-directed therapy, and 49 had clinical benefit (37.1%). Exceptional responses were observed in 26 patients (19.7% of treated patients). Pathogenic germline variants (PGVs) were identified in 160 patients (15.8% of cohort), including 49 PGVs (4.8% of cohort) with therapeutic relevance. For 55 patients with carcinoma of unknown primary origin, NGS identified the primary site in 28 (50.9%), and sequencing-directed therapy in 13 patients resulted in clinical benefit in 7 instances (53.8%), including 5 exceptional responses. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The high rate of therapeutically relevant PGVs identified across diverse cancer types supports a recommendation for directed germline testing in all patients with advanced cancer. The high frequency of therapeutically relevant somatic and germline findings in patients with carcinoma of unknown primary origin and other rare cancers supports the use of comprehensive NGS profiling as a component of standard of care for these disease entities. American Medical Association 2021-02-25 2021-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7907987/ /pubmed/33630025 http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamaoncol.2020.7987 Text en Copyright 2021 Cobain EF et al. JAMA Oncology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License.
spellingShingle Original Investigation
Cobain, Erin F.
Wu, Yi-Mi
Vats, Pankaj
Chugh, Rashmi
Worden, Francis
Smith, David C.
Schuetze, Scott M.
Zalupski, Mark M.
Sahai, Vaibhav
Alva, Ajjai
Schott, Anne F.
Caram, Megan E. V.
Hayes, Daniel F.
Stoffel, Elena M.
Jacobs, Michelle F.
Kumar-Sinha, Chandan
Cao, Xuhong
Wang, Rui
Lucas, David
Ning, Yu
Rabban, Erica
Bell, Janice
Camelo-Piragua, Sandra
Udager, Aaron M.
Cieslik, Marcin
Lonigro, Robert J.
Kunju, Lakshmi P.
Robinson, Dan R.
Talpaz, Moshe
Chinnaiyan, Arul M.
Assessment of Clinical Benefit of Integrative Genomic Profiling in Advanced Solid Tumors
title Assessment of Clinical Benefit of Integrative Genomic Profiling in Advanced Solid Tumors
title_full Assessment of Clinical Benefit of Integrative Genomic Profiling in Advanced Solid Tumors
title_fullStr Assessment of Clinical Benefit of Integrative Genomic Profiling in Advanced Solid Tumors
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Clinical Benefit of Integrative Genomic Profiling in Advanced Solid Tumors
title_short Assessment of Clinical Benefit of Integrative Genomic Profiling in Advanced Solid Tumors
title_sort assessment of clinical benefit of integrative genomic profiling in advanced solid tumors
topic Original Investigation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7907987/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33630025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamaoncol.2020.7987
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