| Literature DB >> 33067323 |
Antonio Passaro1, Umberto Malapelle2, Marzia Del Re3, Ilaria Attili4, Alessandro Russo5, Elena Guerini-Rocco6,7, Caterina Fumagalli7, Pasquale Pisapia2, Francesco Pepe2, Caterina De Luca2, Federico Cucchiara3, Giancarlo Troncone2, Romano Danesi3, Lorenzo Spaggiari6,8, Filippo De Marinis4, Christian Rolfo9.
Abstract
The advances in understanding the inherited biological mechanisms of non-small cell lung cancer harbouring epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutations led to a significant improvement in the outcomes of patients treated with EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Despite these clinically impressive results, clinical results are not always uniform, suggesting the need for deepening the molecular heterogeneity of this molecularly defined subgroup of patients beyond the clinical and biological surface.The availability of tissue and blood-based tumour genotyping allows us to improve the understanding of molecular and genetic intratumor heterogeneity, driving the measurement of clonal evaluation in patients with lung cancer carrying EGFR mutations. Genetic diversification, clonal expansion and selection are highly variable patterns of genetic diversity, resulting in different biological entities, also a prerequisite for Darwinian selection and therapeutic failure.Such emerging pieces of evidence on the genetic diversity, including adaptive and immunomodulated aspects, provide further evidence for the role of the tumour microenvironment (TME) in drug-resistance and immune-mediated mechanisms. Matching in daily clinical practice, the detailed genomic profile of lung cancer disease and tracking the clonal evolution could be the way to individualise the further target treatments in EGFR-positive disease. Characterising the tumour and immune microenvironment during the time of the cancer evaluation could be the way forward for the qualitative leap needed from bench to bedside. Such a daring approach, aiming at personalising treatment selection in order to exploit the TME properties and weaken tumour adaptivity, should be integrated into clinical trial design to optimise patient outcome. © Author (s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. Published by BMJ on behalf of the European Society for Medical Oncology.Entities:
Keywords: EGFR; NSCLC; heterogeneity; mutations
Year: 2020 PMID: 33067323 PMCID: PMC7569934 DOI: 10.1136/esmoopen-2020-000919
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ESMO Open ISSN: 2059-7029
Figure 1Clonal evolution through epidermal growth factor receptor-targeted therapy. (A) Intratumor heterogeneity based on multiregion sequencing. (B) Linear cancer evolution through subclonal selection. (C) Cell progression after tyrosine kinase inhibitors showing different genomic patterns of selection through different lines of therapy.