Abstract 416P
Background
Identification of molecular subgroups has revolutionized the treatment of metastatic adenocarcinoma lung.Practice in India is to test for EGFR hotspot mutations by PCR, ALK by IHC and ROS1 by FISH (conventional testing).Tissue NGS (next generation sequencing) testing is increasing; but availability of adequate tissue is a problem.Aim of our study was to evaluate the added benefit of blood NGS testing in patients who were negative by conventional molecular testing.
Methods
This was a retrospective analysis of patients with metastatic lung cancer, who presented at Manipal hospital, Bangalore, Jan 2019 and May 2020.
Results
108 patients, 35-75 years, were analyzed. 78 (72%) men, 30(28%) women. 87 (80.6%) had adeno and 21 (19.4%) had squamous cell carcinoma. All adenocarcinoma patients were tested on tumor tissue for EGFR hotspot mutations by PCR, ALK by IHC and ROS1 by FISH. Molecular alterations by conventional testing were found in 34 (39%) patients and 53(61%) were negative. Out of these 34, 29 (33%) had EGFR, 3 (3.1%) had ALK and 2 (2.4%) had ROS1 alterations. We further evaluated the conventionally tested negative patients to blood NGS testing (liquid biopsy). Only 20 (37%) out of the 53 conventionally tested negative patients were subjected to blood NGS testing due to logistic reasons. We found 14 (70%) out of 20 had detectable mutation on blood NGS. Out of the 14, we picked up 6(42%) EGFR (3 common, 3 uncommon), 1 (7 %) ALK, 1 (7 %) ROS1, 1 (7 %) MET exon 14 skip, 2 ( 14%) HER 2 and 3 (21 %) RAS mutations (G12C). We treated 10(50%) out of 20 subjects: 5 EGFR mutation patients with geftinib/afatinib/ osimertinib, 1 ALK with crizotinib, 1 ROS with crizotinib, 1 MET with Capmatinib, and 2 HER2 with Afatinib.
Conclusions
Findings of our study proves patients who are negative by conventional testing should be further evaluated with blood NGS testing. In our study, inspite of limited testing, we were able to detect additional 14 patients with driver mutations by doing blood NGS testing, thus increasing our mutation detection from 39% to 55%.Advantage of blood NGS testing is ease of sample collection, faster turnaround time, that it is able to overcome the common problem of inadequate tissue in lung cancer.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
77P - Dual targeting oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis in triple-negative breast cancers: En route to effective inhibition of tumour metabolism
Presenter: Alexander Scherbakov
Session: e-Poster Display Session
78P - Novel allogeneic cell immunotherapy for advanced cancers
Presenter: Ratnavelu Kananathan
Session: e-Poster Display Session
86P - The impact of sarcopenia on chemotherapy toxicity and survival rate among colorectal cancer patients who underwent chemotherapy: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Presenter: Timotius Hariyanto
Session: e-Poster Display Session
87P - Predictive risk factors and online nomograms for colon cancer with synchronous liver metastasis
Presenter: Yajuan Zhu
Session: e-Poster Display Session
88P - Research of radiomics based on indeterminate lung nodules predicting prognosis of LARC patients
Presenter: Zhang Zhiyuan
Session: e-Poster Display Session
89P - Biomarker analysis of regorafenib dose escalation study (RECC study): A phase II multicenter clinical trial in Japan
Presenter: Masanobu Enomoto
Session: e-Poster Display Session
90P - The role of miR-133a-3p/SP1/IGF1R axis in the progression of colorectal cancer
Presenter: Hui Li
Session: e-Poster Display Session
91P - Prognostic biomarker of clinical outcome in locally advanced rectal cancer in Chinese patients
Presenter: Sandy Ho
Session: e-Poster Display Session
92P - Development and validation of risk and prognostic nomograms for bone metastases in advanced colorectal cancer patients
Presenter: Nan Wang
Session: e-Poster Display Session
93P - Assessment of nutritional status of colorectal cancer patients in a tertiary government hospital
Presenter: Rogelio Velasco
Session: e-Poster Display Session