Clinical utility of plasma-based digital next-generation sequencing in oncogene-driven non-small-cell lung cancer patients with tyrosine kinase inhibitor resistance

•Multicenter prospective study including 53 EGFR/ALK/ROS1-TKI-resistant patients.•Thirty-four patients (64%) had evidence of tumor-DNA shed for resistance assessment.•Actionable resistance alterations were detected in 45% of the patients.•Target-independent alterations were more frequent in osimerti...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Lung cancer (Amsterdam, Netherlands) Netherlands), 2019-08, Vol.134, p.72-78
Hauptverfasser: Zugazagoitia, Jon, Gómez-Rueda, Ana, Jantus-Lewintre, Eloisa, Isla, Dolores, Camps, Carlos, Ramos, Inmaculada, Trigo, Jose Manuel, Bernabé, Reyes, Juan-Vidal, Oscar, Sanchez-Torres, Jose Miguel, García-Campelo, Rosario, Provencio, Mariano, Felip, Enriqueta, de Castro, Javier, Faull, Iris, Lanman, Richard B., Ponce-Aix, Santiago, Paz-Ares, Luis, Garrido, Pilar
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:•Multicenter prospective study including 53 EGFR/ALK/ROS1-TKI-resistant patients.•Thirty-four patients (64%) had evidence of tumor-DNA shed for resistance assessment.•Actionable resistance alterations were detected in 45% of the patients.•Target-independent alterations were more frequent in osimertinib-resistant patients.•Eleven patients (20%) received molecularly-informed therapies based on plasma NGS. Resistance to tyrosine-kinase inhibitors (TKIs) is a clinical challenge in patients with oncogene-driven non-small-cell lung cancers (NSCLC). We have analyzed the utility of next-generation sequencing (NGS) of cell-free circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) to impact the clinical care of patients with TKI resistance. We conducted a multi-institutional prospective study including consecutive EGFR, ALK, or ROS1-altered NSCLC patients with TKI resistance from 12 Spanish institutions. Post-progression ctDNA NGS was performed by Guardant Health (Guardant360 assay). We included 53 patients separated in 3 cohorts: 31 EGFR-mutant NSCLCs with first/second-generation TKI resistance (cohort 1), 15 EGFR T790M + NSCLCs with osimertinib resistance (cohort 2), and 7 ALK/ROS1-rearranged NSCLCs with crizotinib and/or next-generation TKI resistance (cohort 3). Besides Guardant360, 22 patients from cohort 1 (71%) underwent post-progression tumor biopsies and/or alternative plasma-based genotyping. In the entire study population, 34 patients (64%) had reliable evidence of tumor-DNA shed for resistance assessment, and 24 patients (45%) had actionable alterations. Target-independent pathogenic alterations were frequently detected, particularly at osimertinib resistance. Eleven patients (20%) received subsequent molecular-guided therapies indicated by plasma NGS alone (n = 9, 17%), or plasma NGS and tissue sequencing (n = 2, 4%), deriving the expected clinical benefit. Of these, 9 had EGFR T790 M mutation and received osimertinib, 1 had ALK G1202R mutation and received lorlatinib, and 1 had ROS1 G2032R mutation and received cabozantinib. Two additional cases from cohort 1 (6%) had undetectable EGFR T790 M by Guardant360 but were T790M + by tissue and BEAMing digital PCR respectively, and also received osimertinib. NGS of ctDNA detects actionable alterations in a large proportion of oncogene-driven NSCLC patients with TKI resistance, and can be used to guide subsequent treatments as a complement or alternative to tissue or PCR-based plasma genotyping in the real-world clinical setting.
ISSN:0169-5002
1872-8332
DOI:10.1016/j.lungcan.2019.05.032