| Literature DB >> 29755651 |
Jean-François Laes1, Philippe Aftimos2, Philippe Barthelemy1, Joaquim Bellmunt2,3, Guy Berchem4, Carlos Camps5, Ramón de Las Peñas6, Ana Finzel1, Jesús García-Foncillas7, Petteri Hervonen8, Ibrahim Wahid9, Timo Joensuu8, Louis Kathan10, Anthony Kong11, James Mackay12, Christos Mikropoulos13, Kefah Mokbel14, Jean-Loup Mouysset15, Sergey Odarchenko16, Timothy J Perren17, Rika Pienaar10, Carlos Regonesi18, Shadi Salem Alkhayyat19, Abdul Rahman El Kinge20, Omalkhair Abulkhair20, Khaled Morsi Galal21, Hady Ghanem22, Fadi El Karak23, Angel Garcia24, Gregori Ghitti1, Helen Sadik1.
Abstract
Molecular profiling and functional assessment of signalling pathways of advanced solid tumours are becoming increasingly available. However, their clinical utility in guiding patients' treatment remains unknown. Here, we assessed whether molecular profiling helps physicians in therapeutic decision making by analysing the molecular profiles of 1057 advanced cancer patient samples after failing at least one standard of care treatment using a combination of next-generation sequencing (NGS), immunohistochemistry (IHC) and other specific tests. The resulting information was interpreted and personalized treatments for each patient were suggested. Our data showed that NGS alone provided the oncologist with useful information in 10-50% of cases (depending on cancer type), whereas the addition of IHC/other tests increased extensively the usefulness of the information provided. Using internet surveys, we investigated how therapy recommendations influenced treatment choice of the oncologist. For patients who were still alive after the provision of the molecular information (76.8%), 60.4% of their oncologists followed report recommendations. Most treatment decisions (93.4%) were made based on the combination of NGS and IHC/other tests, and an approved drug- rather than clinical trial enrolment- was the main treatment choice. Most common reasons given by physicians to explain the non-adherence to recommendations were drug availability and cost, which remain barriers to personalised precision medicine. Finally, we observed that 27% of patients treated with the suggested therapies had an overall survival > 12 months. Our study demonstrates that the combination of NGS and IHC/other tests provides the most useful information in aiding treatment decisions by oncologists in routine clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: molecular profiling; next-generation sequencing; precision medicine; solid tumour; therapeutic decision making in oncology
Year: 2018 PMID: 29755651 PMCID: PMC5945513 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.24757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Definitions of the categories of the variants
| Variant categorya | Definition |
|---|---|
| Damaging | A variant for which several published studies demonstrated a functional impact on the protein (activating or inhibiting) and where clinical information is also available confirming the impact |
| Potentially damaging | A variant for which only one publication has shown a functional impact based on an |
| Unknown | A variant for which there are no publications associated with a functional impact and that is not known as a SNP in the NCBI dbSNP database |
| Polymorphism | A variant identified in the NCBI dbSNP database as a polymorphic variant with a minor allele frequency of at least 1% |
| Rare polymorphism | A rare polymorphism is a variant found at less than 1% in population but that has been described as benign by functional analysis |
aNote that this categorization applies comparably to somatic and germline variants.
dbSNP, Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Database; NCBI, National Center for Biotechnology Information; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism.
Figure 1Variants identified by NGS
All the variants were stratified by potential functional impact and by cancer type.
Definitions of the treatment categories
| Category | Definition | |
|---|---|---|
| According to approval status | ||
| Approved for cancer type analysed | Treatment approved by the FDA for the tumour type being analysed | |
| Approved for other cancer type | Treatment approved by the FDA for other tumour but not for cancer type being analysed | |
| Under development | Treatments in development, tested in phase II, II and IV clinical trials recruiting patients during 2016. These clinical trials (specifying altered genes or pathways within the inclusion criteria) were identified using | |
Categorization according to approval status takes into consideration if the treatment has been FDA approved and in which indications, or if it is still in clinical trial investigation.
Categorization according to clinical benefit evaluates the strength of evidence and the type of response to a treatment based on the presence of a specific molecular alteration.
Note that these 2 categories are independent. A treatment being classified according to the approval status does not automatically qualify it to any of the categories in clinical benefit. Indeed, a FDA approved drug can be classified as “unknown” clinical benefit if there is no strong evidence of clinical benefit to the aberration detected in the sample, or if there is contradictory evidence based on patient pathway analysis.
MSS: microsatellite stable.
Figure 2Categorisation of samples analysed
(A) Number of samples rejected and processed; (B) Patients with treatment options (approved for the cancer type analysed, approved for other cancer types or under development) and without, according to test; (C) The potential or lack of potential or the unknown potential clinical benefit of samples, according to test and cancer type. PCB, potential clinical benefit.
Figure 3Results of oncologist survey
(A) Survival status of patients 3 months after provision of molecular results; (B) Treatment choices according and against recommendations; (C) Treatment modification stratified based on the test type; (D) Treatment choices according to treatment approval status.
Figure 4Overall survival of patients
For the cases where our recommendations were followed (n = 114), the overall survival was analysed.