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The Pediatric Precision Oncology INFORM Registry: Clinical Outcome and Benefit for Patients with Very High-Evidence Targets

Authors :
Steffen Hirsch
Caroline Hutter
Bianca Goemans
Kristian W. Pajtler
David Reuss
Gabriele Calaminus
Gnana Prakash Balasubramanian
Nicola Dikow
C. Michel Zwaan
Arndt Borkhardt
David T.W. Jones
Birgit Burkhardt
Matthias Schwab
Ingrid Øra
Ines B. Brecht
Uta Dirksen
Christian Sutter
Kathrin Schramm
Roman Tremmel
Bernarda Kazanowska
Peter Lichter
M. Scheer
Gudrun Fleischhack
André O. von Bueren
Mirjam Blattner-Johnson
David Capper
Felix Sahm
Simone Fulda
Natalie Jäger
Nicolas U. Gerber
Olaf Witt
Jan-Henning Klusmann
Irene Schmid
Petra Fiesel
Matthias Fischer
Roland Meisel
Stefan M. Pfister
Michaela Nathrath
Cornelis M. van Tilburg
Angelika Eggert
Sebastian Stark
Christof M. Kramm
Elke Pfaff
Kerstin Grund
Arend von Stackelberg
Andrej Lissat
Peter Vorwerk
Petra Ketteler
Angelika Freitag
Olli Lohi
Michael T. Meister
Ruth Witt
Norbert Graf
Annette Kopp-Schneider
Pascal D. Johann
Dominik T. Schneider
Karin P.S. Langenberg
Simone Hettmer
Dirk Reinhardt
Antonis Kattamis
Andreas E. Kulozik
Andreas von Deimling
Jan J. Molenaar
Wilhelm Wößmann
Maria Filippidou
Stephan Tippelt
Frank Westermann
Stephan Wolf
Michael C. Frühwald
Barbara C. Jones
Ewa Koscielniak
Till Milde
Stefanie Hecker-Nolting
Dietrich von Schweinitz
Pediatrics
Tampere University
Department of Paediatrics
BioMediTech
Source :
Cancer Discovery, 11(11), 2764-2779. American Association for Cancer Research Inc., Cancer discovery, Vol. 11, No 11 (2021) pp. 2764-2779
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

INFORM is a prospective, multinational registry gathering clinical and molecular data of relapsed, progressive, or high-risk pediatric patients with cancer. This report describes long-term follow-up of 519 patients in whom molecular alterations were evaluated according to a predefined seven-scale target prioritization algorithm. Mean turnaround time from sample receipt to report was 25.4 days. The highest target priority level was observed in 42 patients (8.1%). Of these, 20 patients received matched targeted treatment with a median progression-free survival of 204 days [95% confidence interval (CI), 99–not applicable], compared with 117 days (95% CI, 106–143; P = 0.011) in all other patients. The respective molecular targets were shown to be predictive for matched treatment response and not prognostic surrogates for improved outcome. Hereditary cancer predisposition syndromes were identified in 7.5% of patients, half of which were newly identified through the study. Integrated molecular analyses resulted in a change or refinement of diagnoses in 8.2% of cases. Significance: The pediatric precision oncology INFORM registry prospectively tested a target prioritization algorithm in a real-world, multinational setting and identified subgroups of patients benefiting from matched targeted treatment with improved progression-free survival, refinement of diagnosis, and identification of hereditary cancer predisposition syndromes. See related commentary by Eggermont et al., p. 2677 . This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2659

Details

ISSN :
21598290 and 21598274
Volume :
11
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer discovery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f3aa2e6219234f552ef0d4f152d58341