| Literature DB >> 32436923 |
Jan Hudeček1, Leonie Voorwerk2, Maartje van Seijen3, Iris Nederlof2, Michiel de Maaker3, Jose van den Berg4, Koen K van de Vijver5, Karolina Sikorska6, Sylvia Adams7, Sandra Demaria8,9, Giuseppe Viale10,11, Torsten O Nielsen12, Sunil S Badve13, Stefan Michiels14,15, William Fraser Symmans16, Christos Sotiriou17, David L Rimm18,19, Stephen M Hewitt20, Carsten Denkert21,22, Sibylle Loibl23, Sherene Loi24, John M S Bartlett25,26,27, Giancarlo Pruneri28,29, Deborah A Dillon30, Maggie C U Cheang31, Andrew Tutt32, Jacqueline A Hall33, Zuzana Kos34, Roberto Salgado24,35, Marleen Kok2,36, Hugo M Horlings3,4.
Abstract
Stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) are a potential predictive biomarker for immunotherapy response in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). To incorporate sTILs into clinical trials and diagnostics, reliable assessment is essential. In this review, we propose a new concept, namely the implementation of a risk-management framework that enables the use of sTILs as a stratification factor in clinical trials. We present the design of a biomarker risk-mitigation workflow that can be applied to any biomarker incorporation in clinical trials. We demonstrate the implementation of this concept using sTILs as an integral biomarker in a single-center phase II immunotherapy trial for metastatic TNBC (TONIC trial, NCT02499367), using this workflow to mitigate risks of suboptimal inclusion of sTILs in this specific trial. In this review, we demonstrate that a web-based scoring platform can mitigate potential risk factors when including sTILs in clinical trials, and we argue that this framework can be applied for any future biomarker-driven clinical trial setting.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Breast cancer; Tumour biomarkers; Tumour immunology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32436923 PMCID: PMC7217941 DOI: 10.1038/s41523-020-0155-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Breast Cancer ISSN: 2374-4677
Risks with possible high impact identified in a phase II immunotherapy trial[6] based on the perspectives of Hall et al.[1] with our approach to mitigation of that risk.
| Type of risk | Risk | Description of risk | Mitigation approach | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Risks to patients | No stroma or tumor cells in biopsy | Discomfort and risks associated with a sampling intervention | Take multiple biopsies from one lesion at the same time (a minimum of three biopsies per lesion[ |
| 2. | Risks to patients | Loss of data confidentiality | Patient samples sent to multiple institutions and reviewers | Pseudonymization should be applied, hide slide labels, implement strict access control, ensure no metadata is linked to a slide |
| 3. | Risks to biomarker development | Inter-laboratory variability and interobserver variability | Different methodologies used to score slides, interrater variability | Use of international guidelines for scoring and training, use consensus score of four expert pathologists from three institutes |
| 4. | Operational risks | Failure of sample collection, processing, and quality | Missing or poor-quality samples resulting in poor consensus scoring | Standardized tissue processing, workflow management |
| 5. | Operational risks | Inadequate image quality or no ability to access image | Missing, poor, or inaccurate scoring | Track the scores of all pathologists and notify when scores are inconsistent |
| 6. | Operational risks/risks to patients | Long turnaround time | Delay in patient randomization and treatment | Timeline tracking incorporated in workflow |
| 7. | Operational risks | Data management failure | Errors in collecting manual scores, typos, data conversion issues | Structured digital scores from pathologist to the analyst |
Fig. 1Organization of a workflow for reliable and timely biomarker scoring in a general single-center or multi-center trial.
Personnel at individual centers scan the slides after processing by the local pathology department. Digital slides are uploaded to a central web-based repository, such as Slide Score. A study-specific identifier is assigned to each sample. The central manager is notified by the system when new slides are available and requests pathologists to review it. When a consensus score is obtained, the trial office is notified for randomization of the patient.