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Cocktail & Poster Display session

109P - A multiomic, single-cell measurable residual disease (scMRD) assay for phasing DNA mutations and surface immunophenotypes

Date

04 Oct 2023

Session

Cocktail & Poster Display session

Presenters

Simone Formisano

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2023) 8 (suppl_1_S5): 1-55. 10.1016/esmoop/esmoop101646

Authors

S. Formisano1, C. Murphy2, K. Thompson2, L. Nousheen2, T. Druley2

Author affiliations

  • 1 Scientific Liaison, Mission Bio, 94080 - SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO/US
  • 2 Mission Bio, 94080 - South San Francisco/US

Resources

This content is available to ESMO members and event participants.

Abstract 109P

Background

The small population of cancerous cells that remain following treatment, known as measurable residual disease (MRD), is the major cause of relapse in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Usually, these refractory cells have gained additional resistance mutations or changed their surface immunophenotypes in ways that preclude detection and phasing by current gold standard flow cytometry or bulk NGS assays. For this reason, a multiomic single-cell MRD (scMRD) assay could offer a more comprehensive indicator of relapse and the potential for faster response.

Methods

Here, we present a new scMRD assay with a 0.01% limit of detection that provides single-cell clonal architecture and immunophenotyping to not only identify residual leukemia cells, but also identify putative DNA or protein targets for salvage therapy. The assay enables rare-cell detection on a standard Mission Bio Tapestri run by adding (i) an upfront bead-based protocol to enrich for blast cells, (ii) a DNA and protein panel specifically designed for AML MRD diagnosis and treatment, and (iii) a new, automated analysis pipeline to evaluate single-cell multiomics output. By utilizing Mission Bio’s single-molecule DNA sensitivity for single cells, this pipeline can identify and correlate co-occurring de novo variants, thereby reducing false positive rates. It furthermore can create phylogenetic trees of the detected MRD cells and present their surface protein signature and arm-level copy number. In addition, the multiplexing of up to three patient samples combined in one run via germline identification further reduces per sample costs and increases throughput.

Results

To demonstrate these features, we applied the scMRD assay to banked bone marrow aspirate samples from 3 patients. The scMRD assay resolved the clonal architecture identifying multiple co-occurring mutations and readily distinguished pre-leukemic from leukemic clones. The integration of genotype and immunophenotypic further enhanced MRD detection by identifying genotype-specific protein expression patterns.

Conclusions

By combining high sensitivity with multiomics, this assay offers a potential scalable solution for comprehensive MRD detection that guides therapeutic decision-making.

Editorial acknowledgement

Clinical trial identification

Legal entity responsible for the study

The authors.

Funding

Mission Bio.

Disclosure

All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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