Author:
Bayle Arnaud,Belcaid Laila,Palmieri Lola-Jade,Teysonneau Diego,Cousin Sophie,Spalato-Ceruso Mariella,Aldea Mihaela,Vasseur Damien,Alame Melissa,Blouin Laura,Soubeyran Isabelle,Nicotra Claudio,Ngocamus Maud,Hollebecque Antoine,Loriot Yohann,Besse Benjamin,Lacroix Ludovic,Rouleau Etienne,Barlesi Fabrice,Andre Fabrice,Italiano Antoine
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Despite the effectiveness of the various targeted therapies currently approved for solid tumors, acquired resistance remains a persistent problem that limits the ultimate effectiveness of these treatments. Polyclonal resistance to targeted therapy has been described in multiple solid tumors through high-throughput analysis of multiple tumor tissue samples from a single patient. However, biopsies at the time of acquired resistance to targeted agents may not always be feasible and may not capture the genetic heterogeneity that could exist within a patient.
Methods
We analyzed circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) with a large next-generation sequencing panel to characterize the landscape of secondary resistance mechanisms in two independent prospective cohorts of patients (STING: n = 626; BIP: n = 437) with solid tumors who were treated with various types of targeted therapies: tyrosine kinase inhibitors, monoclonal antibodies and hormonal therapies.
Results
Emerging alterations involved in secondary resistance were observed in the plasma of up 34% of patients regardless of the type of targeted therapy. Alterations were polyclonal in up to 14% of patients. Emerging ctDNA alterations were associated with significantly shorter overall survival for patients with some tumor types.
Conclusion
This comprehensive landscape of genomic aberrations indicates that genetic alterations involved in secondary resistance to targeted therapy occur frequently and suggests that the detection of such alterations before disease progression may guide personalized treatment and improve patient outcome.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology,Molecular Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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