| Literature DB >> 28978556 |
Eirini Pectasides1,2, Matthew D Stachler1,3, Sarah Derks1,4, Yang Liu1,5, Steven Maron6, Adam J Bass7,5, Daniel V Catenacci8, Mirazul Islam1,5, Lindsay Alpert9, Heewon Kwak9, Hedy Kindler6, Blase Polite6, Manish R Sharma6, Kenisha Allen6, Emily O'Day6, Samantha Lomnicki6, Melissa Maranto6, Rajani Kanteti6, Carrie Fitzpatrick9, Christopher Weber9, Namrata Setia9, Shu-Yuan Xiao9, John Hart9, Rebecca J Nagy10, Kyoung-Mee Kim11, Min-Gew Choi12, Byung-Hoon Min13, Katie S Nason14, Lea O'Keefe14, Masayuki Watanabe15, Hideo Baba16, Rick Lanman10, Agoston T Agoston3, David J Oh17, Andrew Dunford5, Aaron R Thorner18, Matthew D Ducar18, Bruce M Wollison18, Haley A Coleman18, Yuan Ji19, Mitchell C Posner20, Kevin Roggin20, Kiran Turaga20, Paul Chang21, Kyle Hogarth22, Uzma Siddiqui23, Andres Gelrud23, Gavin Ha5, Samuel S Freeman5, Justin Rhoades5, Sarah Reed5, Greg Gydush5, Denisse Rotem5, Jon Davison14, Yu Imamura15,16, Viktor Adalsteinsson5, Jeeyun Lee24.
Abstract
Gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma (GEA) is a lethal disease where targeted therapies, even when guided by genomic biomarkers, have had limited efficacy. A potential reason for the failure of such therapies is that genomic profiling results could commonly differ between the primary and metastatic tumors. To evaluate genomic heterogeneity, we sequenced paired primary GEA and synchronous metastatic lesions across multiple cohorts, finding extensive differences in genomic alterations, including discrepancies in potentially clinically relevant alterations. Multiregion sequencing showed significant discrepancy within the primary tumor (PT) and between the PT and disseminated disease, with oncogene amplification profiles commonly discordant. In addition, a pilot analysis of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) sequencing demonstrated the feasibility of detecting genomic amplifications not detected in PT sampling. Lastly, we profiled paired primary tumors, metastatic tumors, and cfDNA from patients enrolled in the personalized antibodies for GEA (PANGEA) trial of targeted therapies in GEA and found that genomic biomarkers were recurrently discrepant between the PT and untreated metastases. Divergent primary and metastatic tissue profiling led to treatment reassignment in 32% (9/28) of patients. In discordant primary and metastatic lesions, we found 87.5% concordance for targetable alterations in metastatic tissue and cfDNA, suggesting the potential for cfDNA profiling to enhance selection of therapy.Significance: We demonstrate frequent baseline heterogeneity in targetable genomic alterations in GEA, indicating that current tissue sampling practices for biomarker testing do not effectively guide precision medicine in this disease and that routine profiling of metastatic lesions and/or cfDNA should be systematically evaluated. Cancer Discov; 8(1); 37-48. ©2017 AACR.See related commentary by Sundar and Tan, p. 14See related article by Janjigian et al., p. 49This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1. ©2017 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28978556 PMCID: PMC5894850 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-17-0395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397