Abstract 91P
Background
Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women worldwide, primarily presenting as hormone receptor (HR)-positive and HER2-negative. Despite improved outcomes with endocrine therapies, disease progression remains a risk, often occurring early in treatment. Current liquid biopsy assays lack the sensitivity required for early molecular profiling. This study introduces an ultra-sensitive ctDNA NGS assay for detailed genomic profiling of breast cancer patients experiencing early progression during endocrine therapy.
Methods
This ongoing study has enrolled 46 patients with advanced HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer. Plasma samples were collected after aromatase inhibitor treatment and before starting Fulvestrant. Using PredicineCARE ULTRA, a highly sensitive liquid biopsy assay with a proprietary NGS panel targeting key oncogenic drivers, deep sequencing at over 100,000x coverage enables ultra-sensitive detection of genomic changes, greatly surpassing standard ctDNA NGS assays' typical 20,000x coverage.
Results
Among the 46 patients analyzed, the assay detected 193 somatic mutations, 95 gene copy number variations (CNVs), and an FGFR3 gene fusion. The most frequent mutations, found in at least 20% of patients, included TP53 (33%), PIK3CA (26%), ATM (24%), ESR1 (22%), and BRCA2 (20%). The ultra-sensitive assay identified 31.3% more mutations and 30.1% more CNVs compared to a simulated standard 20,000x ctDNA assay. It excelled at detecting mutations with minor MAF below 0.1% and in patients with low tumor fractions (<1%). The assay also detected 30.7% more PIK3CA and 11.1% more ESR1 variants, with MAFs as low as 0.08% and 0.06%, respectively. The FGFR3-BAIAP2L1 gene fusion was also uniquely detected at a 0.09% MAF.
Conclusions
The ultra-sensitive ctDNA NGS assay outperformed standard liquid biopsy assays in detecting low-frequency mutations and those from samples with low tumor fractions in HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer. Its superior detection may help identify patients suitable for targeted therapies like PIK3CA and ESR1 inhibitors, improving early detection of treatment resistance and disease monitoring for more effective personalized treatment strategies.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
H. Tang, C. Jia, F. Xie, Y. Zhang, S. Jia: Financial Interests, Personal, Full or part-time Employment: Huidu. All other 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