Abstract 473P
Background
Nitrosoureas (lomustine or fotemustine) and antiangiogenic (bevacizumab or regorafenib) are second-line treatment options for patients with rGBM, but to date predictors or efficacy are lacking. We aimed to develop a multi-classification ML algorithm to predict the response to different second-line therapies.
Methods
We conducted a retrospective study to assess the combined predictive value of molecular profiles (tested by FoundationOne®CDx on tissue) and clinical data (clinical-pathological and treatment characteristics) in a cohort of patients with first rGBM treated with Regorafenib, Lomustine/Fotemustine or Bevacizumab from Oct 2019 to Jan 2023. WHO2021 classification was used for pathological diagnosis, and RANO criteria for neuroradiologic response evaluation. ML was applied to identify the best responders, using a gradient boosting framework basedf on tree-based algorithms LightGBM to integrate clinical and genomic data. Matthews correlation coefficients (MCC) were used as a metric. Best responders were labeled for having a median progression free survival (mPFS) above the third quartile for each treatment.
Results
153 patients were enrolled, treated with Regorafenib (n=95), Bevacizumab (n=19), Nitrosoureas (n=39). The mPFS in each treatment cohort was, respectively, 2.1 m (95% CI 1.9-3.3), 3.6 m (95% CI 2.1-4.8) and 3.0 m (95% CI 2.4-5.7). The mOS was, respectively, 12 m (95% CI 9.1-14), 7.0 m (95% CI 6.0-11), and 8.0 m (95% CI 5.0-13). By performing the multi-classification model we obtained a MCC of 0.32. The SHAP analysis showed age at diagnosis, gender, MGMT and CDKN2B, CDKN2A, PTEN, EGFR, TP53, MTAP mutational status as the most important predictors. These variables were ranked in a different order for each second-line treatment, thus demonstrating that the multi-classification ML approach could discriminate which patients are likely to benefit from each second-line treatment.
Conclusions
The multi-classification ML model developed in this study was able to identify clinical and molecular signatures of rGBM responding to Bevacizumab,Regorafenib or Nitrosuree. This model could be useful to choose the more effective second-line therapy in rGBM.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
G. Lombardi: Financial Interests, Personal, Advisory Board: Janssen, Braun, Helath4U; Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker: Bayer, Orbus, Novartis, Servier; Financial Interests, Institutional, Coordinating PI: Bayer SpA. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
556P - Predicting the efficacy of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy in rectal cancer patients based on dynamic tumor-informed ctDNA-MRD
Presenter: Weiwei Xiao
Session: Poster session 16
557P - Three-year update of real-world evaluation of ColonAiQ for colorectal cancer screening in asymptomatic individuals
Presenter: Baohua Wang
Session: Poster session 16
558P - Survival benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy based on molecular residual disease detection in resected colorectal liver metastases: Subgroup analysis from CIRCULATE-Japan GALAXY
Presenter: Kozo Kataoka
Session: Poster session 16
561P - Liquid biopsy tracking of immunotherapy-induced T cell dynamics in MSS colorectal and endometrial tumors
Presenter: Holger Heyn
Session: Poster session 16
562P - Acquired genomic alterations on first-line chemotherapy (CT) + cetuximab in advanced colorectal cancer (mCRC): Circulating tumor (ct)DNA analysis of the randomized phase II trial TIME-PRODIGE-28
Presenter: Valerie Boige
Session: Poster session 16
564P - Short-course radiotherapy combined with chemotherapy and PD-1 inhibitor in proficient mismatch repair or microsatellite stable (pMMR/MSS) low-lying early rectal cancer: Preliminary findings from a prospective, multi-center, phase II trial (TORCH-E)
Presenter: Fan Xia
Session: Poster session 16
565P - Neoadjuvant chemotherapy, excision, and observation for early rectal cancer: The phase II NEO trial (CCTG CO.28) results after minimum 3 years follow up
Presenter: Carl Brown
Session: Poster session 16