| Literature DB >> 35047063 |
Martín Osvaldo Angel1,2, Carmen Pupareli3, Tomas Soule4, Florencia Tsou3,5, Mariano Leiva6, Federico Losco1,7, Federico Esteso8,9, Juan Manuel O Connor8,10, Romina Luca8, Fernando Petracci11,12, Romina Girotti13, Yamil Damián Mahmoud13,14, Claudio Martín3,15, Matías Chacón16,17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The role of the molecular tumour board (MTB) is to recommend personalised therapy for patients with cancer beyond standard-of-care treatment. A comprehensive molecular analysis of the tumour in a molecular pathology laboratory is important for all targeted therapies approaches. Here we report the 1-year experience of the Instituto Alexander Fleming Molecular Tumour Board. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The MTB of the Instituto Alexander Fleming was launched in December 2019 in a monthly meeting. In each interactive monthly session, five cases were presented and discussed by the members. These cases were referred by the treating oncologists. The MTB recommendations were sent to each physician individually, and to the rest of the meeting participants. This was discussed with the patients/families by the treating oncologist. The final decision to choose therapy was left to the treating physicians. Of the 32 patients presented at MTB, 28 (87.5%) had potentially actionable alterations and only 4 (12.5%) had no actionable mutation. Six (19%) patients received a local regulatory agency approved drug recommendation, nine (28%) patients received an off-label approval treatment recommendation and three (9%) patients did not receive the treatment due to access and reimbursement of the drug.Entities:
Keywords: molecular profile; molecular tumour board; precision medicine
Year: 2021 PMID: 35047063 PMCID: PMC8723751 DOI: 10.3332/ecancer.2021.1312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecancermedicalscience ISSN: 1754-6605
Figure 1.Workflow of the MTB at Instituto Alexander Fleming (period: December 2019 through December 2020). SoC, Standard of care; NGS, Next generation sequencing; MTB, Molecular tumour board.
Clinical and genomic characteristics of patients’ treatment based on MTB discussion.
| Patient | Diagnosis | Genomic alteration | MTB recommendation | PFS (months) | Best response |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NSCLC | EGFR K745-E746ins | Afatinib | 29.25 | SD |
| 2 | NSCLC | GNAS p.Q227L | Trametinib | 10.75 | PD |
| 3 | CRC | ERBB2 | Trastuzumab/pertuzumab | 1.58 | PD |
| 4 | NSCLC | ALK | Alectinib | 38.08 | PR |
| 5 | Pancreatic adenocarcinoma | ATM | Olaparib | 9.67 | PR |
| 6 | Urothelial | STK11 | Everolimus | 1.55 | PD |
| 7 | CRC | BRCA1 | Olaparib | Never done | PR |
| 8 | Ductal carcinoma (breast) | ERBB2 | Trastuzumab Pertuzumab | 13.58 | PD |
| 9 | CUP | KIT | Avapritinib | 17.00 | PD |
| 10 | NSLC | EGFR | Osimertinib | 37.75 | PR |
| 11 | mCRPC | AR amplification | Abiraterone | Never done | PR |
| 12 | NSCLC | ALK fusion | Lorlatinib | 23.83 | PD |
| 13 | CUP | ERBB2 | Trastuzumab/pertuzumab | 15.25 | PD |
| 14 | Ductal carcinoma (breast) | FGF19 amplification | Infigratinib | Never done | SD |
| 15 | Bone sarcoma | FGFR1 amplification | Pazopanib | 7.42 | SD |
| 16 | Cholangiocarcinoma | IDH1 | Ivosidenib | Never done | SD |
| Median PFS: 15.25 months | |||||
NSCLC, Non-small cell lung carcinoma; CRC, Colorectal carcinoma; CUP, Carcinoma of unknown primary; mCRPC, Metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer; SD, Stable disease; PD, Progressive disease; PR, Partial response; PFS, Progression-free survival; AR, androgen receptor.
Figure 2.Number of patients with actionable mutations presented at MTB.
Figure 3.Genomics alterations detected in patients presented at MTB. (a): Genomic alteration with potential benefit in patient’s tumour type. (b): Genomic alterations with potential therapeutical benefit in other tumour types. (c): Genomic alterations with no therapeutic benefit or resistance to treatment.
Figure 4.Number of patients according to mutations/Mb.