scholarly journals EP1.14-03 Driver Genes as Predictive Indicators of Brain Metastasis in Patients with Advanced NSCLC: EGFR and ALK as Well as RET Gene Mutations

2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (10) ◽  
pp. S1033
Author(s):  
H. Wang ◽  
Z. Wang ◽  
J. Ma ◽  
G. Zhang ◽  
M. Zhang ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 487-495 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huijuan Wang ◽  
Ziqi Wang ◽  
Guowei Zhang ◽  
Mina Zhang ◽  
Xiaojuan Zhang ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A211-A211
Author(s):  
Nayan Lamba ◽  
Bryan Iorgulescu

BackgroundManagement of advanced non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) has been transformed by PD-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI), with FDA approvals in 2015 (second-line) and 2016 (first-line). Despite ~40% of NSCLC patients developing brain metastases, these patients were disproportionately excluded from the pioneering ICI trials. Thus herein we evaluate the overall survival (OS) associated with ICI in NSCLC brain metastases nationally.MethodsPatients newly-diagnosed with stage 4 NSCLC, including brain metastases, from 2010–2016 were identified from the National Cancer Database (comprising >70% of all newly-diagnosed cancers in the U.S.) Landmark survival analysis was used to address immortal time bias. Post-approval, median time from diagnosis to ICI was 58 days, and this timepoint was selected for all landmark survival analyses (OS estimated by Kaplan-Meier technique, and compared by logrank test and multivariable Cox regression) and for multivariable logistic regression to identify predictors of ICI utilization.Results50,858 patients presented with advanced NSCLC that involved the brain: representing 27.6% of all newly-diagnosed stage 4 cases. Following initial FDA approvals in 2015, ICI use in brain metastasis patients rose from 7.2% in 2015 to 12.7% in 2016. OS for NSCLC brain metastasis patients diagnosed post-approval (i.e. 2015, median 6.3 months, 95% [confidence interval] CI: 6.0–6.6) was substantially better than those diagnosed pre-approval (median 5.5 months, 95%CI: 5.4–5.7, p<0.001) and, in fact, than those diagnosed in 2014 (median 5.9 months, 95%CI: 5.6–6.1, p=0.002). Among patients diagnosed post-approval (in 2015, n=7,431), ICI receipt demonstrated substantially improved OS in landmark survival analyses (median 13.8 months, 95%CI: 12.2–15.1; vs. 8.5 months, 95%CI: 8.3–8.9, p<0.001) – benefits which persisted in multivariable landmark survival analyses (hazard ratio [HR] 0.83, 95%CI: 0.71–0.96, p=0.02), independent of patient characteristics, other therapies, and extracranial disease. For patients diagnosed post-approval, who reached the landmark timepoint, ICI receipt was independent of patient demographics, socioeconomic status, and hospital type—with the exception of Medicaid-insured patients, who were less likely than privately insured patients to receive ICI (OR 0.77, 95%CI: 0.60–0.97, p=0.03).ConclusionsNationally, the use of ICI for NSCLC brain metastasis patients is increasing, generally without significant socioeconomic barriers. Brain metastasis patients diagnosed in the post-approval second-line ICI era (2015) demonstrated significantly better OS than patients diagnosed pre-approval and even than patients diagnosed only in 2014. ICI was associated with a >60% relative increase in median OS. Together our findings from a real-world population demonstrate that the dramatic OS benefits of ICIs for advanced NSCLC also extended to brain metastasis patients.


2021 ◽  
Vol 57 (10) ◽  
pp. 621
Author(s):  
H. Zheng ◽  
Z.-S. Chen ◽  
J. Li

2021 ◽  
pp. clincanres.0967.2021
Author(s):  
Janice Kim ◽  
Diana Bradford ◽  
Erin Larkins ◽  
Lee H. Pai-Scherf ◽  
Somak Chatterjee ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi154-vi155
Author(s):  
Koji Yoshimoto ◽  
Nayuta Higa ◽  
Hajime Yonezawa ◽  
Hiroyuki Uchida ◽  
Toshiaki Akahane ◽  
...  

Abstract AIM The 2016 WHO classification requires molecular diagnosis in routine glioma diagnostics. However, analysis of key driver gene mutations and chromosome 1p/19q co-deletions cannot be performed in a single platform. In this study, we evaluated the feasibility of a glioma-specific NGS panel for molecular diagnosis of glioma patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS We developed a glioma-specific NGS panel consisting of 48 genes, including glioma-relevant key driver genes and 21 genes mapped to chromosome 1 and 19. DNA was extracted from formaldehyde fixed-paraffin embedded (FFPE) tumor tissues histologically identified by a pathologist, and from patient-derived blood as a control. In this system, we implemented a molecular barcodes method to enhance confidence in clinical samples and analyzed 80 glioma patients (Grade II: 17 cases, Grade III: 16 cases, Grade IV: 47 cases). RESULTS From these 80 cases, IDH1 and H3F3A mutations were detected in 23 cases (29%) and 2 cases (5%), respectively. The 1p/19q co-deletion was detected in 15 cases (19%), with all cases also containing IDH1 mutations. In Grade IV cases, EGFR, PDGFR, and FGFR mutations were detected in 6% (amp 19%), 9%, and 4% (amp 17%) of cases, respectively. PTEN, TP53, NF1, RB1, and CDKN2A mutations were detected in 37% (del 72%), 45% (del 13%), 21% (del 23%), 15% (del 60%), and 2% (del 53%) of cases, respectively. CONCLUSION Diagnosis of glioma patients with this glioma-specific NGS panel is feasible.


Author(s):  
Birgit Assmus ◽  
Sebastian Cremer ◽  
Klara Kirschbaum ◽  
David Culmann ◽  
Katharina Kiefer ◽  
...  

Abstract Aims Somatic mutations of the epigenetic regulators DNMT3A and TET2 causing clonal expansion of haematopoietic cells (clonal haematopoiesis; CH) were shown to be associated with poor prognosis in chronic ischaemic heart failure (CHF). The aim of our analysis was to define a threshold of variant allele frequency (VAF) for the prognostic significance of CH in CHF. Methods and results We analysed bone marrow and peripheral blood-derived cells from 419 patients with CHF by error-corrected amplicon sequencing. Cut-off VAFs were optimized by maximizing sensitivity plus specificity from a time-dependent receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis from censored data. 56.2% of patients were carriers of a DNMT3A- (N = 173) or a TET2- (N = 113) mutation with a VAF &gt;0.5%, with 59 patients harbouring mutations in both genes. Survival ROC analyses revealed an optimized cut-off value of 0.73% for TET2- and 1.15% for DNMT3A-CH-driver mutations. Five-year-mortality was 18% in patients without any detected DNMT3A- or TET2 mutation (VAF &lt; 0.5%), 29% with only one DNMT3A- or TET2-CH-driver mutations above the respective cut-off level and 42% in patients harbouring both DNMT3A- and TET2-CH-driver mutations above the respective cut-off levels. In carriers of a DNMT3A mutation with VAF ≥ 1.15%, 5-year mortality was 31%, compared with 18% mortality in those with VAF &lt; 1.15% (P = 0.048). Likewise, in patients with TET2 mutations, 5-year mortality was 32% with VAF ≥ 0.73%, compared with 19% mortality with VAF &lt; 0.73% (P = 0.029). Conclusion The present study defines novel threshold levels for clone size caused by acquired somatic mutations in the CH-driver genes DNMT3A and TET2 that are associated with worse outcome in patients with CHF.


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