Personalized Clinical Decision Making Through Implementation of a Molecular Tumor Board: A German Single-Center Experience
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Published:2018-11
Issue:2
Volume:
Page:1-16
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ISSN:2473-4284
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Container-title:JCO Precision Oncology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:JCO Precision Oncology
Author:
Hoefflin Rouven1, Geißler Anna-Lena1, Fritsch Ralph1, Claus Rainer1, Wehrle Julius1, Metzger Patrick1, Reiser Meike1, Mehmed Leman1, Fauth Lisa1, Heiland Dieter Henrik1, Erbes Thalia1, Stock Friedrich1, Csanadi Agnes1, Miething Cornelius1, Weddeling Britta1, Meiss Frank1, von Bubnoff Dagmar1, Dierks Christine1, Ge Isabell1, Brass Volker1, Heeg Steffen1, Schäfer Henning1, Boeker Martin1, Rawluk Justyna1, Botzenhart Elke Maria1, Kayser Gian1, Hettmer Simone1, Busch Hauke1, Peters Christoph1, Werner Martin1, Duyster Justus1, Brummer Tilman1, Boerries Melanie1, Lassmann Silke1, von Bubnoff Nikolas1
Affiliation:
1. All authors: University of Freiburg, Freiburg; Ralph Fritsch, Julius Wehrle, Cornelius Miething, Christoph Peters, Martin Werner, Justus Duyster, Tilman Brummer, Melanie Boerries, Silke Lassmann, and Nikolas von Bubnoff, German Cancer Consortium, partner site Freiburg, and German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg; Rainer Claus, Augsburg Medical Center, Augsburg; and Hauke Busch, University of Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany.
Abstract
Purpose Dramatic advances in our understanding of the molecular pathophysiology of cancer, along with a rapidly expanding portfolio of molecular targeted drugs, have led to a paradigm shift toward personalized, biomarker-driven cancer treatment. Here, we report the 2-year experience of the Comprehensive Cancer Center Freiburg Molecular Tumor Board (MTB), one of the first interdisciplinary molecular tumor conferences established in Europe. The role of the MTB is to recommend personalized therapy for patients with cancer beyond standard-of-care treatment. Methods This retrospective case series includes 198 patients discussed from March 2015 through February 2017. The MTB guided individual molecular diagnostics, assessed evidence of actionability of molecular alterations, and provided therapy recommendations, including approved and off-label treatments as well as available matched clinical trials. Results The majority of patients had metastatic solid tumors (73.7%), mostly progressive (77.3%) after a mean of 2.0 lines of standard treatment. Diagnostic recommendations resulted in 867 molecular diagnostic tests for 172 patients (five per case), including exome analysis in 36 cases (18.2%). With a median turnaround time of 28 days, treatment recommendations were given to 104 patients (52.5%). These included single-agent targeted therapies (42.3%), checkpoint inhibitors (37.5%), and combination therapies (18.3%). Treatment recommendations were implemented in 33 of 104 patients (31.7%), of whom 19 (57.6%) showed stable disease or partial response, including 14 patients (7.1% of the entire population) receiving off-label treatments. Conclusion Personalized extended molecular-guided patient care is effective for a small but clinically meaningful proportion of patients in challenging clinical situations. Limited access to targeted drugs, lack of trials, and submission at late disease stage prevents broader applicability, whereas genome-wide analyses are not a strict requirement for predictive molecular testing.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology
Cited by
55 articles.
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