Literature DB >> 27782852

Delivering on the promise of precision cancer medicine.

Michael F Berger1,2, Eliezer M Van Allen3,4.   

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27782852      PMCID: PMC5078954          DOI: 10.1186/s13073-016-0373-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genome Med        ISSN: 1756-994X            Impact factor:   11.117


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The emerging paradigm of precision cancer medicine, in which the use of molecular data at the point of care directly impacts patient treatment and clinical decision-making, has already had a substantial, direct clinical impact on many aspects of medical oncology. Advances in precision cancer medicine include well-established molecularly targeted therapies for patients with BRAF-mutant metastatic melanoma [1], those with EGFR-mutant [2] or ALK-mutant [3] non-small-cell lung cancer, and those with BCR–ABL-translocation-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia [4]. In addition, the introduction of large-scale genomic technologies at the point of care [5-7] has catalyzed discoveries in translational oncology and is driving new research that aims to dissect selective responses to targeted, immune-driven therapies and to chemotherapies, as well as identifying novel targets for which therapies are now in development. Indeed, propelled by the ability to generate increasingly complex molecular data directly from patient tumor and germ-line samples, the cycle of translating discoveries into clinical practice may be accelerating. However, precision cancer medicine remains a promise rather than a solid and robust reality in many areas of clinical oncology. Molecular profiling of tumors is not yet broadly applied in all types of cancer. Furthermore, although the molecular landscapes of many cancers have been revealed using precision oncology approaches, many of the alterations observed in patients remain undruggable, and viable targets are incompletely characterized. In addition, a considerable amount of diversity exists regarding the types of molecular tests being offered clinically [8]; combined with the knowledge gap regarding the interpretation of genomic test results within the field of clinical oncology, this diversity has fostered confusion among physicians about the meaning and the clinical utility of genomic data at the point of care [9]. Perhaps most critically, prospective trials of molecular profiling across cancers in an unselected manner are not yet mature. In aggregate, these issues have limited the practical applicability of precision cancer medicine, but they also define the areas in which investment is needed to make it a reality. In this special issue of Genome Medicine, original research and reviews from leaders in the field tackle the current challenges in precision oncology. This special issue details technological and analytical advances in tumor characterization, which have provided novel insights into the cancer genome and epigenome. In addition, reports herein explore the integration of molecular profiling into clinical oncology to enable careful assessment of the extent to which prospective clinical sequencing is influencing treatment decisions and improving outcomes, for both adult and pediatric cancers. Furthermore, as new targets are discovered and novel drug resistance mechanisms emerge, combination therapies may prove to be advantageous, and promising therapeutic strategies in immuno-oncology will require new paradigms beyond the assignment of molecularly targeted therapies that are based on a single target lesion [10]. Improved methods to interpret genomic variants and integrate genomic data into the electronic health record [11] are essential for extending effective treatment options to patients who are most likely to benefit. In addressing all of these topics, this special issue provides a wide view of the current state of the field and highlights the breadth of translational and clinical advances enabled by the application of genomic approaches to the characterization, diagnosis, and treatment of cancer. To capitalize on these advances and ensure maximal benefit to patients, we advocate expanded access to genomic testing for patients with all types of cancer. Currently, reimbursement for tumor molecular profiling is mostly limited to a small number of tumor types such as lung cancer and melanoma, for which standard-of-care therapies are administered on the basis of molecular aberrations. However, it is now well established that individual targetable alterations may occur across a wide range of histologically defined tumor types and that the same drug may elicit responses across different cancers. Furthermore, broadening the application of molecular profiling will be necessary to establish the evidence base for genomically guided therapy for patients with rare cancers and for patients with common cancers that have rare mutations. Innovative clinical trials such as “basket studies” [12], which enroll patients on the basis of a specific genomic alteration that is shared across many histologies, are essential for increasing access to promising therapies and for evaluating the degree to which drug response is determined by disease context. Large academic medical centers have primarily funded large-scale clinical sequencing through philanthropic and research funds. This trend is unsustainable and it is incumbent upon all stakeholders to ensure that tumor genomic profiling is made available to all who might benefit from it. With expanded access to genomic profiling, obtaining the necessary data regarding treatment outcomes and carrying out prospective randomized controlled trials may become more feasible at the scale necessary to determine the clinical impact of this approach across cancer types, given the clinically heterogeneous patient populations that would receive such testing. In addition, this approach will highlight areas in which current methodology is insufficient and in which other profiling approaches, such as transcriptome or epigenetic profiling, may provide further clinical impact. Towards that end, studies in prostate [13] and pediatric [14] cancers have already indicated the benefit of adding transcriptome-level data to genome-level data to identify actionable targets. Such an approach may also inform multi-omic features that are associated with response and resistance to emerging immuno-oncology treatment paradigms, which may foster new methods for patient stratification and highlight resistance mechanisms that, in turn, may identify novel combination strategies. Finally, a complete assessment of the utility of genomic profiling in clinical oncology will require genomic and clinical data to be shared across institutions. Data-sharing is a central tenet of the Cancer Moonshot initiative [15] advocated by Vice President Biden, and the National Cancer Institute recently launched the Genomic Data Commons to centralize and standardize cancer genomic data [16]. Given the rarity of many putative targetable mutations in cancer, data-sharing among institutions and clinical laboratories engaged in tumor sequencing is necessary to prioritize novel biomarkers that may inform future treatment decisions. Furthermore, data-sharing driven by cancer patients themselves may complement these approaches through patients’ right of access to medical records. Integrating data generated by multiple platforms and modalities may enable the identification of novel genetic targets that would go undetected if the data remain in silos. Ultimately, these steps are necessary to build on the efforts described in this special issue and to bring us closer to truly delivering on the promise of precision medicine in cancer.
  14 in total

1.  Gefitinib or chemotherapy for non-small-cell lung cancer with mutated EGFR.

Authors:  Makoto Maemondo; Akira Inoue; Kunihiko Kobayashi; Shunichi Sugawara; Satoshi Oizumi; Hiroshi Isobe; Akihiko Gemma; Masao Harada; Hirohisa Yoshizawa; Ichiro Kinoshita; Yuka Fujita; Shoji Okinaga; Haruto Hirano; Kozo Yoshimori; Toshiyuki Harada; Takashi Ogura; Masahiro Ando; Hitoshi Miyazawa; Tomoaki Tanaka; Yasuo Saijo; Koichi Hagiwara; Satoshi Morita; Toshihiro Nukiwa
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2010-06-24       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  Memorial Sloan Kettering-Integrated Mutation Profiling of Actionable Cancer Targets (MSK-IMPACT): A Hybridization Capture-Based Next-Generation Sequencing Clinical Assay for Solid Tumor Molecular Oncology.

Authors:  Donavan T Cheng; Talia N Mitchell; Ahmet Zehir; Ronak H Shah; Ryma Benayed; Aijazuddin Syed; Raghu Chandramohan; Zhen Yu Liu; Helen H Won; Sasinya N Scott; A Rose Brannon; Catherine O'Reilly; Justyna Sadowska; Jacklyn Casanova; Angela Yannes; Jaclyn F Hechtman; Jinjuan Yao; Wei Song; Dara S Ross; Alifya Oultache; Snjezana Dogan; Laetitia Borsu; Meera Hameed; Khedoudja Nafa; Maria E Arcila; Marc Ladanyi; Michael F Berger
Journal:  J Mol Diagn       Date:  2015-03-20       Impact factor: 5.568

3.  Vemurafenib in Multiple Nonmelanoma Cancers with BRAF V600 Mutations.

Authors:  David M Hyman; Igor Puzanov; Vivek Subbiah; Jason E Faris; Ian Chau; Jean-Yves Blay; Jürgen Wolf; Noopur S Raje; Eli L Diamond; Antoine Hollebecque; Radj Gervais; Maria Elena Elez-Fernandez; Antoine Italiano; Ralf-Dieter Hofheinz; Manuel Hidalgo; Emily Chan; Martin Schuler; Susan Frances Lasserre; Martina Makrutzki; Florin Sirzen; Maria Luisa Veronese; Josep Tabernero; José Baselga
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2015-08-20       Impact factor: 91.245

4.  Crizotinib versus chemotherapy in advanced ALK-positive lung cancer.

Authors:  Alice T Shaw; Dong-Wan Kim; Kazuhiko Nakagawa; Takashi Seto; Lucio Crinó; Myung-Ju Ahn; Tommaso De Pas; Benjamin Besse; Benjamin J Solomon; Fiona Blackhall; Yi-Long Wu; Michael Thomas; Kenneth J O'Byrne; Denis Moro-Sibilot; D Ross Camidge; Tony Mok; Vera Hirsh; Gregory J Riely; Shrividya Iyer; Vanessa Tassell; Anna Polli; Keith D Wilner; Pasi A Jänne
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2013-06-01       Impact factor: 91.245

5.  Integrative clinical genomics of advanced prostate cancer.

Authors:  Dan Robinson; Eliezer M Van Allen; Yi-Mi Wu; Nikolaus Schultz; Robert J Lonigro; Juan-Miguel Mosquera; Bruce Montgomery; Mary-Ellen Taplin; Colin C Pritchard; Gerhardt Attard; Himisha Beltran; Wassim Abida; Robert K Bradley; Jake Vinson; Xuhong Cao; Pankaj Vats; Lakshmi P Kunju; Maha Hussain; Felix Y Feng; Scott A Tomlins; Kathleen A Cooney; David C Smith; Christine Brennan; Javed Siddiqui; Rohit Mehra; Yu Chen; Dana E Rathkopf; Michael J Morris; Stephen B Solomon; Jeremy C Durack; Victor E Reuter; Anuradha Gopalan; Jianjiong Gao; Massimo Loda; Rosina T Lis; Michaela Bowden; Stephen P Balk; Glenn Gaviola; Carrie Sougnez; Manaswi Gupta; Evan Y Yu; Elahe A Mostaghel; Heather H Cheng; Hyojeong Mulcahy; Lawrence D True; Stephen R Plymate; Heidi Dvinge; Roberta Ferraldeschi; Penny Flohr; Susana Miranda; Zafeiris Zafeiriou; Nina Tunariu; Joaquin Mateo; Raquel Perez-Lopez; Francesca Demichelis; Brian D Robinson; Marc Schiffman; David M Nanus; Scott T Tagawa; Alexandros Sigaras; Kenneth W Eng; Olivier Elemento; Andrea Sboner; Elisabeth I Heath; Howard I Scher; Kenneth J Pienta; Philip Kantoff; Johann S de Bono; Mark A Rubin; Peter S Nelson; Levi A Garraway; Charles L Sawyers; Arul M Chinnaiyan
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2015-05-21       Impact factor: 41.582

6.  Personalized oncology through integrative high-throughput sequencing: a pilot study.

Authors:  Sameek Roychowdhury; Matthew K Iyer; Dan R Robinson; Robert J Lonigro; Yi-Mi Wu; Xuhong Cao; Shanker Kalyana-Sundaram; Lee Sam; O Alejandro Balbin; Michael J Quist; Terrence Barrette; Jessica Everett; Javed Siddiqui; Lakshmi P Kunju; Nora Navone; John C Araujo; Patricia Troncoso; Christopher J Logothetis; Jeffrey W Innis; David C Smith; Christopher D Lao; Scott Y Kim; J Scott Roberts; Stephen B Gruber; Kenneth J Pienta; Moshe Talpaz; Arul M Chinnaiyan
Journal:  Sci Transl Med       Date:  2011-11-30       Impact factor: 17.956

7.  Oncologists' and cancer patients' views on whole-exome sequencing and incidental findings: results from the CanSeq study.

Authors:  Stacy W Gray; Elyse R Park; Julie Najita; Yolanda Martins; Lara Traeger; Elizabeth Bair; Joshua Gagne; Judy Garber; Pasi A Jänne; Neal Lindeman; Carol Lowenstein; Nelly Oliver; Lynette Sholl; Eliezer M Van Allen; Nikhil Wagle; Sam Wood; Levi Garraway; Steven Joffe
Journal:  Genet Med       Date:  2016-02-11       Impact factor: 8.822

8.  Integrative Clinical Sequencing in the Management of Refractory or Relapsed Cancer in Youth.

Authors:  Rajen J Mody; Yi-Mi Wu; Robert J Lonigro; Xuhong Cao; Sameek Roychowdhury; Pankaj Vats; Kevin M Frank; John R Prensner; Irfan Asangani; Nallasivam Palanisamy; Jonathan R Dillman; Raja M Rabah; Laxmi Priya Kunju; Jessica Everett; Victoria M Raymond; Yu Ning; Fengyun Su; Rui Wang; Elena M Stoffel; Jeffrey W Innis; J Scott Roberts; Patricia L Robertson; Gregory Yanik; Aghiad Chamdin; James A Connelly; Sung Choi; Andrew C Harris; Carrie Kitko; Rama Jasty Rao; John E Levine; Valerie P Castle; Raymond J Hutchinson; Moshe Talpaz; Dan R Robinson; Arul M Chinnaiyan
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2015-09-01       Impact factor: 56.272

9.  Whole-exome sequencing and clinical interpretation of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumor samples to guide precision cancer medicine.

Authors:  Eliezer M Van Allen; Nikhil Wagle; Petar Stojanov; Danielle L Perrin; Kristian Cibulskis; Sara Marlow; Judit Jane-Valbuena; Dennis C Friedrich; Gregory Kryukov; Scott L Carter; Aaron McKenna; Andrey Sivachenko; Mara Rosenberg; Adam Kiezun; Douglas Voet; Michael Lawrence; Lee T Lichtenstein; Jeff G Gentry; Franklin W Huang; Jennifer Fostel; Deborah Farlow; David Barbie; Leena Gandhi; Eric S Lander; Stacy W Gray; Steven Joffe; Pasi Janne; Judy Garber; Laura MacConaill; Neal Lindeman; Barrett Rollins; Philip Kantoff; Sheila A Fisher; Stacey Gabriel; Gad Getz; Levi A Garraway
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2014-05-18       Impact factor: 53.440

10.  The impact of tumor profiling approaches and genomic data strategies for cancer precision medicine.

Authors:  Andrea Garofalo; Lynette Sholl; Brendan Reardon; Amaro Taylor-Weiner; Ali Amin-Mansour; Diana Miao; David Liu; Nelly Oliver; Laura MacConaill; Matthew Ducar; Vanesa Rojas-Rudilla; Marios Giannakis; Arezou Ghazani; Stacy Gray; Pasi Janne; Judy Garber; Steve Joffe; Neal Lindeman; Nikhil Wagle; Levi A Garraway; Eliezer M Van Allen
Journal:  Genome Med       Date:  2016-07-26       Impact factor: 11.117

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1.  Assessing the Training and Research Environment for Genomics, Bioinformatics, and Immunology in Radiation Oncology.

Authors:  Kent W Mouw; Tyler F Beck; Judith C Keen; Adam P Dicker
Journal:  JCO Clin Cancer Inform       Date:  2018-12

Review 2.  Great future or greedy venture: Precision medicine needs philosophy.

Authors:  Fei Jiao; Ruoyu Guo; Jacques S Beckmann; Zhonghai Yan; Yun Yang; Jinxia Hu; Xin Wang; Shuyang Xie
Journal:  Health Sci Rep       Date:  2021-09-14

Review 3.  Breakthroughs in modern cancer therapy and elusive cardiotoxicity: Critical research-practice gaps, challenges, and insights.

Authors:  Ping-Pin Zheng; Jin Li; Johan M Kros
Journal:  Med Res Rev       Date:  2017-09-01       Impact factor: 12.944

  3 in total

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