| Literature DB >> 27882345 |
Lynette M Sholl1, Khanh Do2,3, Priyanka Shivdasani1, Ethan Cerami4, Adrian M Dubuc1, Frank C Kuo1, Elizabeth P Garcia1, Yonghui Jia1, Phani Davineni1, Ryan P Abo1,5, Trevor J Pugh6, Paul van Hummelen4, Aaron R Thorner5, Matthew Ducar1,5, Alice H Berger2,7, Mizuki Nishino8, Katherine A Janeway9, Alanna Church10, Marian Harris10, Lauren L Ritterhouse1, Joshua D Campbell2, Vanesa Rojas-Rudilla1,2, Azra H Ligon1, Shakti Ramkissoon1, James M Cleary2,3, Ursula Matulonis2, Geoffrey R Oxnard2, Richard Chao11, Vanessa Tassell11, James Christensen11, William C Hahn2,5,7,12, Philip W Kantoff12, David J Kwiatkowski2, Bruce E Johnson2, Matthew Meyerson1,2,5,7, Levi A Garraway2,7,13, Geoffrey I Shapiro2,3, Barrett J Rollins2, Neal I Lindeman1, Laura E MacConaill1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND. Comprehensive genomic profiling of a patient's cancer can be used to diagnose, monitor, and recommend treatment. Clinical implementation of tumor profiling in an enterprise-wide, unselected cancer patient population has yet to be reported. METHODS. We deployed a hybrid-capture and massively parallel sequencing assay (OncoPanel) for all adult and pediatric patients at our combined cancer centers. Results were categorized by pathologists based on actionability. We report the results for the first 3,727 patients tested. RESULTS. Our cohort consists of cancer patients unrestricted by disease site or stage. Across all consented patients, half had sufficient and available (>20% tumor) material for profiling; once specimens were received in the laboratory for pathology review, 73% were scored as adequate for genomic testing. When sufficient DNA was obtained, OncoPanel yielded a result in 96% of cases. 73% of patients harbored an actionable or informative alteration; only 19% of these represented a current standard of care for therapeutic stratification. The findings recapitulate those of previous studies of common cancers but also identify alterations, including in AXL and EGFR, associated with response to targeted therapies. In rare cancers, potentially actionable alterations suggest the utility of a "cancer-agnostic" approach in genomic profiling. Retrospective analyses uncovered contextual genomic features that may inform therapeutic response and examples where diagnoses revised by genomic profiling markedly changed clinical management. CONCLUSIONS. Broad sequencing-based testing deployed across an unselected cancer cohort is feasible. Genomic results may alter management in diverse scenarios; however, additional barriers must be overcome to enable precision cancer medicine on a large scale. FUNDING. This work was supported by DFCI, BWH, and the National Cancer Institute (5R33CA155554 and 5K23CA157631).Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27882345 PMCID: PMC5111542 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.87062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708