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Data from Tumor Genomic Testing for >4,000 Men with Metastatic Castration-resistant Prostate Cancer in the Phase III Trial PROfound (Olaparib)

Authors :
Johann de Bono
Christian Poehlein
Allison Allen
Carrie A. Adelman
Jinyu Kang
Julia A. Elvin
Robert Huisden
Alexander Kohlmann
Charles Padua
Young Deuk Choi
Craig Gedye
Nobuaki Matsubara
Mustafa Özgüroǧlu
Guilhem Roubaud
Michael P. Kolinsky
Niven Mehra
David Olmos
Joaquin Mateo
Shahneen Sandhu
Neal Shore
Fred Saad
Karim Fizazi
Caroline Sibilla
Claire Corcoran
Maha Hussain
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose:Successful implementation of genomic testing in clinical practice is critical for identification of men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) eligible for olaparib and future molecularly targeted therapies.Patients and Methods:An investigational clinical trial assay, based on the FoundationOneCDx tissue test, was used to prospectively identify patients with qualifying homologous recombination repair gene alterations in the phase III PROfound study. Evaluation of next-generation sequencing (NGS) tissue test outcome against preanalytic parameters was performed to identify key factors influencing NGS result generation.Results:A total of 4,858 tissue samples from 4,047 patients were tested and reported centrally. NGS results were obtained in 58% (2,792/4,858) of samples (69% of patients). Of samples submitted, 83% were primary tumor samples (96% were archival and 4% newly obtained). Almost 17% were metastatic tumor samples (60% were archival and 33% newly obtained). NGS results were generated more frequently from newly obtained compared with archival samples (63.9% vs. 56.9%) and metastatic compared with primary samples (63.9% vs. 56.2%). Although generation of an NGS result declined with increasing sample age, approximately 50% of samples ages >10 years generated results. While higher tumor content and DNA yield resulted in greater success in obtaining NGS results, other factors, including selection and preservation of samples, may also have had an impact.Conclusions:The PROfound study shows that tissue testing to identify homologous recombination repair alterations is feasible and that high-quality tumor tissue samples are key to obtaining NGS results and identifying patients with mCRPC who may benefit from olaparib treatment.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0af4a5f059d9d09c98a4b55d79bc2c7e