Abstract S5-01: Whole exome sequencing of pre-treatment biopsies from the neoALTTO trial to identify DNA aberrations associated with response to HER2-targeted therapies

Author(s):  
L Pusztai ◽  
W Shi ◽  
T Jiang ◽  
P Nuciforo ◽  
E Holmes ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2770-2770
Author(s):  
Jiao Ma ◽  
Kui Nie ◽  
Giorgio Inghirami ◽  
Kenneth Eng ◽  
Olivier Elemento ◽  
...  

INTRODUCTION : Diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is a malignant non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with approximately one third of patients respond to front-line treatment such as R-CHOP. However, most of the patients often relapse within 2-3 years, and their 3-year progression free survival rate is dropped from 70%-10%. Therefore, understanding of the molecular mechanisms that associated with DLBCL relapse to develop the novel therapeutic approach is in an urgent need. METHODS : Diagnosis (n=34) and paired relapse samples (n=37) from 34 patients with DLBCL treated with R-CHOP were retrieved from the pathology archives under a protocol approved by the Institutional Review Board. Of these, matched normal germline controls are also available in 10 cases. We performed whole exome sequencing (WES) using the illumine Hiseq2000 platform. Short sequencing reads were aligned to human genome assembly GRCh37/hg19 using the BWA aligner. Variant calls were made and determined to be either 'diagnosis-specific", "relapse-specific" or shared based on variant allele frequency (VAF) in the diagnosis, relapsed and normal controls. To identify relapse specific variants that may play a driver role in relapse, the potential pathogenicity of all relapse specific variants with VAF > 20 is assessed by the UMD predictor and all predicted pathogenic variants are further annotated by Ingenuity variant analysis. Genes with mutations in 2 relapse samples and none of the diagnostic samples, or mutations in >3 relapse sample and <1 pre-treatment sample are selected regardless of the outcome of the UMD predictor. Pathway enriched analysis was performed by Ingenuity analysis. RESULTS: Analysis of the paired DLBCL samples with matched normal controls demonstrates that relapsed DLBCL develop via divergent evolution from a common precursor as the pre-treatment DLBCL. A total of 661 relapse-specific variants from 595 genes are identified from the above pairwise analysis. 548 of them are missense mutations; 69 are nonsense mutations, and 29 are frameshift mutations. Recurrently mutated genes include TP53 (19% of cases), TNFRSF14 (13.5%), ACTG1 (11.4%), CELSR3 (11.4%), LPR1B (11.4%), GUCY2F (11.4%); ARHGEF10L, DNAH9, DSP, EHD2, HIST1H1B, HIVEP1, KIAA2022, MYC, SKI, SLC29A4, SLIT3, EPHB6, PCDHGA6, BRWD1, C17ORF70 (each 8.6%), and 21 other genes (each 5.7%). Notably, a recurrent missense mutation (p.E50V) in EIF4A2 was identified in 2 cases. About 50% of these recurrently mutated genes are more frequently mutated (p<0.05) in our relapsed DLBCL cohort compared to previously published large DLBCL cohorts comprised predominantly of treatment-naïve DLBCL. Among the top enriched pathways in the set of recurrently mutated genes are aryl hydrocarbon receptor signaling, protein kinase A signaling, ILK signaling, EIF2 signaling, axonal guidance signaling and MYC-mediated apoptosis signaling, while the top enriched pathways in all the mutated genes are axonal guidance signaling, ephrin receptor signaling, actin cytoskeleton signaling and ILK signaling. In addition, ultra-deep sequencing of several relapse-specific variants in pre-treatment samples has identified pre-existing relapse-precursor clones in the pre-treatment tumors, suggesting that these variants may play in role in chemoresistance. CONCLUSION: WES study on a large cohort of relapsed DLBCL with matched pre-treatment tumors provides a comprehensive view of the mutation landscape of relapsed DLBCL. Novel drivers for relapsed tumors are identified; and alterations in pathways previously not implicated in DLBCL pathogenesis are discovered. shRNA and CRISPR screening using a subset of our candidate genes is underway to functionally validate genes that may mediate chemo-resistance. Our study provides a framework for identifying the genetic mechanisms in DLBCL therapeutic resistance and relapse formation. Disclosures Tam: Takeda: Consultancy; Paragon Genomics: Consultancy.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (16) ◽  
pp. 4062
Author(s):  
Lucas W. Thornblade ◽  
Paul Wong ◽  
Daneng Li ◽  
Susanne G. Warner ◽  
Sue Chang ◽  
...  

Background: With minimally effective chemotherapy options, cholangiocarcinoma patients have 5 year survival rate of 10%. Tumor genetic profiling (TGP) can identify mutations susceptible to targeted therapies. We sought to describe the use of TGP and frequency of actionable results in resected cholangiocarcinoma. Methods: A retrospective review of patients undergoing curative intent resection at a comprehensive cancer center (2010–2020). Clinicopathologic and partial or whole exome sequencing data were reviewed. Results: 114 patients (mean age 65 ± 11 years, 45% female) underwent resection of cholangiocarcinoma (46% poorly differentiated, 54% intrahepatic, 36% node positive, 75% margin negative). Additionally, 32% of patients underwent TGP, yielding a mean of 3.1 actionable mutations per patient (range 0–14). Mutations aligned with a median of one drug per patient (range 0–11). Common mutations included TP53 (33%), KRAS (31%), IDH1/2 (14%), FGFR (14%), and BRAF (8%). Targeted therapies were administered in only 4% of patients (23% of eligible sequenced patients). After a median 22 months, 23% had recurrence and 29% were deceased. Discussion: TGP for cholangiocarcinoma has increased over the last decade with targeted therapies identified in most sequenced tumors, impacting treatment in a quarter of eligible patients. Precision medicine will play a central role in the future care of cholangiocarcinoma.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 8533-8533
Author(s):  
Everett James Moding ◽  
Angela B. Hui ◽  
Yonina R. Murciano-Goroff ◽  
Barzin Nabet ◽  
Andre Schultz ◽  
...  

8533 Background: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death world-wide, and chemotherapy and radiation remain backbones of therapy for patients with locoregionally advanced and metastatic disease. However, the genetic mechanisms that mediate resistance to chemotherapy and radiation are largely unclear due to a lack of available tissue at the time of relapse. We hypothesized that circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis could identify emergent mutations after chemotherapy and radiation that may lead to treatment resistance. Methods: To identify emergent mutations at the time of progression following an initial response to chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy for lung cancer, we utilized CAncer Personalized Profiling by deep Sequencing (CAPP-Seq) to analyze plasma samples and matched leukocytes collected pre-treatment and at the time of relapse. We analyzed a targeted panel enriched for lung cancer drivers and recurrently mutated genes for 27 patients treated with chemoradiation therapy for locoregionally advanced lung cancer. In addition, we performed ultra-deep whole exome sequencing ( > 2000X deduped depth) of pre-treatment and relapse cell-free DNA for 5 patients treated with combination chemotherapy for metastatic lung cancer. Functional enrichment analysis was performed on emergent mutation gene lists to identify significantly enriched pathways. Results: We identified emergent variants in 6 out of 27 patients using targeted sequencing after chemoradiation therapy. Emergent mutations after chemoradiation were enriched for plasma membrane adhesion molecules such as PCDH17, PCDH10, and FAT3 (adjusted P = 0.03). Using ultra-deep whole exome sequencing, we observed emergent mutations in 3 out of 5 patients treated with combination chemotherapy. After combination chemotherapy, there was a trend towards enrichment in mutations in ATP-binding cassette transporters, including ABCA13 and ABCB4 (adjusted P = 0.057). Notably, there were no recurrent emergent mutations within our cohort. Conclusions: Our results suggest that ultra-deep whole exome sequencing can non-invasively identify emergent mutations at the time of progression. Resistance to cytotoxic therapy is likely multi-factorial and analysis in expanded cohorts will be helpful to identify recurrently mutated pathways that may contribute to disease progression after an initial response to therapy.


BMC Cancer ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Leah Zhrebker ◽  
Irene Cherni ◽  
Lara M. Gross ◽  
Margaret M. Hinshelwood ◽  
Merrick Reese ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1194-1200
Author(s):  
Amanda Pilling ◽  
Christopher Wee ◽  
Eliezer Bar-Meir ◽  
Gregory Dyson ◽  
Ok Hwang ◽  
...  

Through elucidating the genetic mechanisms of drug sensitivity, precision medicine aims to improve patient selection and response to therapy. Exceptional responders are patients that exhibit exquisite and durable responses to targeted therapy, providing a rare opportunity to identify the molecular basis of drug sensitivity. We identified an exceptional responder to everolimus, an oral inhibitor of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway, in a patient with advanced renal cell carcinoma. Through whole-exome sequencing on pretreatment and metastatic tumor DNA, we identified alterations in several mTOR pathway genes, with several mutations implicated in mTOR activation. Importantly, these alterations are currently not included in commercially available next-generation sequencing panels, suggesting that precision medicine is still limited in its ability to predict responses to mTOR-targeted therapies. Further research to discover and validate predictive biomarkers of response to everolimus and other targeted therapies is urgently needed. Given the rarity of patients with exceptional responses to targeted agents, cooperative efforts to understand the molecular basis for these phenotypes are essential.


2014 ◽  
Vol 62 (S 02) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Hitz ◽  
S. Al-Turki ◽  
A. Schalinski ◽  
U. Bauer ◽  
T. Pickardt ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasemin Dincer ◽  
Michael Zech ◽  
Matias Wagner ◽  
Nikolai Jung ◽  
Volker Mall ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document