Abstract 101P
Background
Immunotherapy has achieved breakthrough progress in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), with some patients experiencing long-term benefits. However, reliable tools for predicting the risk of disease progression (PD) in these patients are lacking. Circulating tumor DNA minimal residual disease (ctDNA MRD) has demonstrated predictive values in early-stage and locally advanced NSCLC, but its role in advanced NSCLC remains unclear.
Methods
The CR1STAL study (NCT05198154) is a multicenter prospective cohort study utilizing ctDNA MRD to monitor the risk of PD in advanced NSCLC. Patients with stage IIIB-IV NSCLC receiving first-line immunotherapy who had progression-free survival of 1 year were screened. Peripheral blood samples were collected every 2-3 months, synchronized with radiographic efficacy evaluations. The personalized target-capture panels for ctDNA detection were tailored based on individual tumor variants identified through the ultra-depth sequencing of a 1021-gene panel. A plasma sample with at least one detected variant was defined as ctDNA MRD positive.
Results
30 NSCLC patients were included, with a median age of 63.5 years. 86.7% were male with median follow-up time of 30.2 months (95% CI 28.4 to 32.0 months). Patients underwent ctDNA MRD monitoring with a median frequency of 4 assessments (range: 3 to 8). 50% of patients tested positive of ctDNA MRD. Compare with the negative group, the ctDNA MRD positive group exhibited an increased risk of PD (hazard ratio: 20.73, 95% CI 2.67 to 161.08, p=0.004), offering a median lead time of 6.2 months (95% CI 5.4 to 7.8 months) than radiographic progression. Furthermore, among the 13 patients who experienced PD, 12 were detected as ctDNA MRD positive, demonstrating a sensitivity of 92.3% and a positive predictive value of 80%. Among the 17 patients with non-PD, 14 were confirmed as ctDNA MRD negative, exhibiting a specificity of 82.4% and negative predictive value of 93.3%.
Conclusions
ctDNA MRD emerges a promising biomarker to predict the risk of PD in advanced NSCLC patients with long-term response to immunotherapy. The surveillance of ctDNA MRD enables earlier detection of PD and facilitates prompt intervention in high-risk patients.
Clinical trial identification
NCT05198154: ctDNA Analysis to Monitor the Risk of Progression after First-line lmmunotherapy in Patients with Advanced NSCLC (CR1STAL).
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
1802P - Cost-effectiveness study of atezolizumab (ATZ) vs. durvalumab (DUR) in elderly extensive disease small cell lung cancer (ED-SCLC) patients (pts): Real-world data (RWD) on first-line chemotherapy combined with immune-checkpoint inhibitors (Chemo-ICIs)
Presenter: Ken Yamamoto
Session: Poster session 07
1803P - Analysis of samples from the SCLC REACTION trial: Discovery of biomarkers to optimize treatment
Presenter: Pernelle Lavaud
Session: Poster session 07
1805P - PKD1L1 mutations in small cell lung cancer: A genomic signature for poor prognosis and drug susceptibility
Presenter: Ning Tang
Session: Poster session 07
Resources:
Abstract
1806P - Clinical characteristics and management of small cell lung cancer long survivors
Presenter: Elisa Gobbini
Session: Poster session 07
1807P - Spatial analyses revealed MMP7 as the biomarker of tumor boundary correlated with immune resistance in small cell lung cancer
Presenter: Le Tang
Session: Poster session 07
1809P - Validation of the lung inmune prognostic (LIPI) index in first-line immunotherapy treatment of small cell lung carcinoma
Presenter: Patricia Cruz Castellanos
Session: Poster session 07
1810P - MYC expression defines distinct transcriptomic landscape and affects response to DNA-damaging therapies in SCLC
Presenter: Caterina de Rosa
Session: Poster session 07