Unique genomic alterations in the circulating tumor DNA of patients with solid tumors brain metastases

Author:

Alder Laura1ORCID,Broadwater Gloria2,Green Michelle3,Van Swearingen Amanda E D14,Lipp Eric S14,Clarke Jeffrey Melson1,Anders Carey K14ORCID,Sammons Sarah5

Affiliation:

1. Division of Medical Oncology, Department of Medicine, Duke Cancer Institute, Duke University , Durham, North Carolina , USA

2. Biostatistics Shared Resource, Duke Cancer Institute , Durham, North Carolina , USA

3. Department of Pathology, Duke University Medical Center , Durham, North Carolina , USA

4. Duke Center for Brain and Spine Metastasis, Duke University Medical Center , Durham, North Carolina , USA

5. Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Although serum circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is routine, data from patients with brain metastases (BrMs) is limited. We assessed genomic alterations in ctDNA from patients with solid tumor BrMs in 3 groups: Isolated BrMs with stable extracranial disease (iCNS), concurrent brain and extracranial progression (cCNS), and extracranial progression with no active BrMs (eCNS). We also compared ctDNA alterations between patients with and without BrMs. Methods Patients with a Guardant360 ctDNA profile with (n = 253) and without BrMs (n = 449) from the Duke Molecular Registry between January 2014 and December 2020 were identified. Actionable alterations were defined as FDA-recognized or standard-of-care biomarkers. Disease status was determined via investigator assessment within 30 days of ctDNA collection. Results Among the 253 patients with BrMs: 29 (12%) had iCNS, 160 (63%) cCNS, and 64 (25%) eCNS. Breast (BC; 12.0%) and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC; 76.4%) were the most common tumor types. ESR1 (60% vs 25%, P < .001) and BRCA2 (17% vs 5%, P = .022) were more frequent in BC BrMs. In NSCLC BrMs, EGFR alterations were most frequent in the iCNS group (iCNS: 67%, cCNS: 40%, eCNS:37%, P = .08) and in patients with BrMs (36% vs 17%, P < .001). Sequencing from both brain tissue and ctDNA were available for 8 patients; 7 (87.5%) had identical alterations. Conclusions This study illustrates the feasibility of detecting alterations from ctDNA among patients with BrMs. A higher frequency of actionable mutations was observed in ctDNA in patients with BrMs. Additional studies comparing ctDNA and alterations in BrMs tissue are needed to determine if ctDNA can be considered a surrogate to support treatment decisions.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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