| Literature DB >> 36176758 |
Sasha C Main1,2, David W Cescon1,3, Scott V Bratman1,2,4.
Abstract
Cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6 (CDK4/6) inhibitors combined with endocrine therapy have transformed the treatment of estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 negative (HER2-) metastatic breast cancer. However, some patients do not respond to this treatment, and patients inevitably develop resistance, such that novel biomarkers are needed to predict primary resistance, monitor treatment response for acquired resistance, and personalize treatment strategies. Circumventing the spatial and temporal limitations of tissue biopsy, newly developed liquid biopsy approaches have the potential to uncover biomarkers that can predict CDK4/6 inhibitor efficacy and resistance in breast cancer patients through a simple blood test. Studies on circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA)-based liquid biopsy biomarkers of CDK4/6 inhibitor resistance have focused primarily on genomic alterations and have failed thus far to identify clear and clinically validated predictive biomarkers, but emerging epigenetic ctDNA methodologies hold promise for further discovery. The present review outlines recent advances and future directions in ctDNA-based biomarkers of CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment response.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; CDK4/6 inhibitors; cell-free DNA; circulating biomarkers; circulating tumor DNA; liquid biopsy; predictive biomarkers; resistance mechanisms
Year: 2022 PMID: 36176758 PMCID: PMC9511796 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2022.37
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Figure 1Overview of CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment and liquid biopsy in ER+/HER2- metastatic breast cancer patients. CDK4/6 inhibitors prevent the phosphorylation of Rb and downstream activation of the transcriptional profile required for progression to the S-phase of the cell cycle. In the anti-CDK4/6 therapy clinical setting, a liquid biopsy may be used to direct therapy, monitor patient response over time, and detect progression. Currently, research efforts focused on monitoring genetic alterations in cfDNA through liquid biopsy have made limited progress. Epigenetic profiling of cfDNA may reveal new biomarkers of CDK4/6 inhibitor efficacy or resistance.
Summary of the main genomic alterations interrogated in ctDNA as biomarkers for CDK4/6 inhibitor resistance
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| Baseline | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | 27 of 156 patients (17.3%) | Target panel NGS (17 genes) | Patients in the palbociclib treatment arm with loss of | O’Leary |
| Baseline | MONALEESA 2,3,7: Ribociclib plus endocrine therapy | 26 of 1,534 patients (1.7%) | Target panel NGS (~600 genes) | Patients with | Bertucci | |
| Progression | Three case reports: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant or ribociclib plus letrozole | NA | Custom library for RB1 and TP53 coding sequence/ Guardant 360 assay (73 genes) | Patients had five different loss-of-function genetic alterations of | Condorelli | |
| Baseline and End-of-treatment | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | Acquired in 6 of 127 patients (4.7%) | Exome sequencing/ Target panel NGS/ ddPCR | Patients exclusively acquired | O’Leary | |
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| Baseline | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | 91 of 360 patients (25.3%) | ddPCR | Patients in the palbociclib treatment arm had similarly improved median PFS regardless of | Fribbens |
| Baseline and End-of-treatment | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | Acquired in 25 of 195 patients (12.8%) | Exome sequencing/ Target panel NGS/ ddPCR | Patients acquired | O’Leary | |
| Baseline | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | 72 of 331 patients (21.8%) | Target panel NGS (17 genes) | Patients in the placebo arm with | O’Leary | |
| Baseline | MONARCH-2: abemaciclib and fulvestrant | 147 of 248 patients (59.3%) | ddPCR | Patients in the abemaciclib treatment arm had improved PFS regardless of | Tolaney | |
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| Baseline | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | 129 of 395 patients (33%) | BEAMing assay | Patients in the palbociclib treatment arm had similarly improved PFS regardless of | Critstofanilli |
| Baseline | MONARCH-2: abemaciclib and fulvestrant | 96 of 219 patients (43.8%) | ddPCR | Patients in the abemaciclib treatment arm had similarly improved PFS regardless of | Tolaney | |
| Baseline | Palbociclib or ribociclib plus fulvestrant or letrozole | 12 of 30 patients (40%) | ddPCR | Patients treated with palbociclib or ribociclib plus endocrine therapy with | Del Re | |
| Baseline | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | 55 of 331 patients (16.6%) | Target panel NGS (17 genes) | PIK3CA mutations were not identified as predictive (exact PFS not reported) | O’Leary | |
| Baseline and End-of-treatment | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | Acquired in 15 of 195 patients (7.6%) | Exome sequencing/Target panel NGS/ddPCR | Patients acquired | O’Leary | |
| Baseline | MONALEESA-7: Ribociclib plus endocrine therapy | 139 of 489 patients (28%) | Target panel NGS (~600 genes) | Patients in the ribociclib treatment arm had improved median PFS compared to the placebo arm, and this was more prominent in patients with wild-type | Bardia | |
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| Progression | MONALEESA-2: Ribociclib plus letrozole | 20 of 427 patients (5%) | Guardant360 assay (73 genes) | Patients in the ribociclib treatment arm with | Formisano |
| Baseline | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | 20 of 401 patients (4.9%) | Target panel NGS (17 genes) | Patients with | O’Leary | |
| Baseline and End-of-treatment | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | Acquired in 2 of 195 patients (1%) | Exome sequencing/Target panel NGS/ddPCR | Patients acquired | O’Leary | |
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| Baseline | PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | 52 of 331patients (15.7%) | Target panel NGS (17 genes) | Patients with | O’Leary |
| Baseline | MONALEESA-7: Ribociclib plus endocrine therapy | 92 of 489 patients (19%) | Target panel NGS (~600 genes) | Patients with | Bardia | |
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| Baseline and on treatment | Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | 66 of 106 patients (62.2%) | ddPCR | Patients treated with palbociclib and fulvestrant with baseline | Raimondi |
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| Baseline | MONALEESA-7: Ribociclib plus endocrine therapy | 51 of 489 patients (10%) | Target panel NGS (~600 genes) | Patients with | Bardia |
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| Baseline | MONALEESA-7: Ribociclib plus endocrine therapy | 35 of 489 patients (7.1%) | Target panel NGS (~600 genes) | Patients with | Bardia |
ctDNA: Circulating tumor DNA; NGS: next-generation sequencing; PFS: progression-free survival; ddPCR: droplet digital polymerase chain reaction; OS: overall survival.
Summary of dynamic ctDNA biomarkers investigated in the CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment setting
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| ddPCR | Baseline, cycle 1 day 15, and progression |
| PALOMA-3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | High and low CDR15 based on a threshold determined by Harrell’s c-index and Benjamini-Hochberg p-value corrections | All patients in the palbociclib treatment arm had a CDR15 less than one. For | O’Leary |
| ddPCR | Baseline, day 15, day 30, and progression |
| ALCINA: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | Ratio relative to baseline (mutant copies/mL) | All patients experienced a decrease in ctDNA on day 15 relative to baseline. Patients with early progression had increased ctDNA on day 30, and patients with longer PFS had lower or consistent ctDNA levels relative to baseline. | Jeannot |
| ddPCR monitoring one tumor-specific mutation per patient | Baseline, day 15, day 30 and progression |
| ALCINA: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | Ratio relative to baseline (mutant copies/mL) | All patients had a decrease in ctDNA on day 15, but this was not associated with PFS. Patients with undetectable ctDNA on day 30 had an improved PFS compared to those with detectable ctDNA (25 | Darrigues |
| Guardant360 assay | Baseline, four weeks | 73 genes | Palbociclib or ribociclib plus endocrine therapy | mVAFR for the 79 mutations found between baseline and week 4 assess in groups of high, medium, and low mVAFR groups and as a continuous variable | mVAFR was significantly associated with PFS, whereas single timepoint mean VAFs or absolute changes in mean VAF were not. Patients with high mVAFR had a worse median PFS than those with low mVAFR (4.2 months | Martinez-Saez |
| mFAST-seq | Various | Aneuploidy | CDK4/6 inhibitor plus endocrine therapy | z-score trajectories | Raised z-score trajectories were significantly related to worse PFS, whereas baseline z-scores were not predictive of progression. A single z-score increased in a consecutive blood sample at any follow-up point was not associated with PFS | Dandachi |
ctDNA: Circulating tumor DNA; ddPCR: droplet digital polymerase chain reaction; CDR15: circulating DNA ratio at cycle one day 15 compared to baseline; PFS: progression-free survival; mVAFR: mean variant allele fraction ratio; mFAST-seq: modified Fast Aneuploidy Screening Test-Sequencing System.