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Molecular Landscape and Actionable Alterations in a Genomically Guided Cancer Clinical Trial: National Cancer Institute Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (NCI-MATCH)

Authors :
Keith T. Flaherty
Peter J. O'Dwyer
Robert Gray
Richard F. Little
Larry Rubinstein
Nci-Match team
Robert L. Comis
Jeffrey Sklar
Lisa M. McShane
Stanley R. Hamilton
David Patton
Carlos L. Arteaga
A. John Iafrate
David J. Sims
Tony Fu
Shuli Li
Mark J. Routbort
Brent Coffey
James A. Zwiebel
Edith P. Mitchell
Naoko Takebe
Barbara A. Conley
P. Mickey Williams
Alice P. Chen
Lyndsay Harris
Jeffrey S. Abrams
Source :
Journal of Clinical Oncology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Society of Clinical Oncology, 2020.

Abstract

PURPOSE Therapeutically actionable molecular alterations are widely distributed across cancer types. The National Cancer Institute Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (NCI-MATCH) trial was designed to evaluate targeted therapy antitumor activity in underexplored cancer types. Tumor biopsy specimens were analyzed centrally with next-generation sequencing (NGS) in a master screening protocol. Patients with a tumor molecular alteration addressed by a targeted treatment lacking established efficacy in that tumor type were assigned to 1 of 30 treatments in parallel, single-arm, phase II subprotocols. PATIENTS AND METHODS Tumor biopsy specimens from 5,954 patients with refractory malignancies at 1,117 accrual sites were analyzed centrally with NGS and selected immunohistochemistry in a master screening protocol. The treatment-assignment rate to treatment arms was assessed. Molecular alterations in seven tumors profiled in both NCI-MATCH trial and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) of primary tumors were compared. RESULTS Molecular profiling was successful in 93.0% of specimens. An actionable alteration was found in 37.6%. After applying clinical and molecular exclusion criteria, 17.8% were assigned (26.4% could have been assigned if all subprotocols were available simultaneously). Eleven subprotocols reached their accrual goal as of this report. Actionability rates differed among histologies (eg, > 35% for urothelial cancers and < 6% for pancreatic and small-cell lung cancer). Multiple actionable or resistance-conferring tumor mutations were seen in 11.9% and 71.3% of specimens, respectively. Known resistance mutations to targeted therapies were numerically more frequent in NCI-MATCH than TCGA tumors, but not markedly so. CONCLUSION We demonstrated feasibility of screening large numbers of patients at numerous accruing sites in a complex trial to test investigational therapies for moderately frequent molecular targets. Co-occurring resistance mutations were common and endorse investigation of combination targeted-therapy regimens.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15277755 and 0732183X
Volume :
38
Issue :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3dcdac7abd0ca1b1d9b6ce2874226065