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Next-generation clinical trials: Novel strategies to address the challenge of tumor molecular heterogeneity

Journal

MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue 5, Pages 967-996

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1016/j.molonc.2014.09.011

Keywords

Molecular heterogeneity; Inter-patient heterogeneity; Intra-patient heterogeneity; Next-generation clinical trials; Expansion Platform Designs; PANGEA; Gastric cancer; Esophagus cancer; Gastroesophageal cancer; Esophagogastric cancer

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH K12 award [CA139160-01A]
  2. NIH K23 award [CA178203-01A1]
  3. UCCCC (University of Chicago Compressive Cancer Center) Award in Precision Oncology-CCSG (Cancer Center Support Grant) [P30 CA014599]
  4. Cancer Research Foundation Young Investigator Award
  5. ALLIANCE for Clinical Trials in Oncology Foundation Young Investigator Award
  6. LLK (Live Like Katie) Foundation Award

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The promise of 'personalized cancer care' with therapies toward specific molecular aberrations has potential to improve outcomes. However, there is recognized heterogeneity within any given tumor-type from patient to patient (inter-patient heterogeneity), and within an individual (intra-patient heterogeneity) as demonstrated by molecular evolution through space (primary tumor to metastasis) and time (after therapy). These issues have become hurdles to advancing cancer treatment outcomes with novel molecularly targeted agents. Classic trial design paradigms are challenged by heterogeneity, as they are unable to test targeted therapeutics against low frequency genomic 'oncogenic driver' aberrations with adequate power. Usual accrual difficulties to clinical trials are exacerbated by low frequencies of any given molecular driver. To address these challenges, there is need for innovative clinical trial designs and strategies implementing novel diagnostic biomarker technologies to account for inter-patient molecular diversity and scarce tissue for analysis. Importantly, there is also need for pre-defined treatment priority algorithms given numerous aberrations commonly observed within any one individual sample. Access to multiple available therapeutic agents simultaneously is crucial. Finally intra-patient heterogeneity through time maybe addressed by serial biomarker assessment at the time of tumor progression. This report discusses various 'next-generation' biomarker-driven trial designs and their potentials and limitations to tackle these recognized molecular heterogeneity challenges. Regulatory hurdles, with respect to drug and companion diagnostic development and approval, are considered. Focus is on the 'Expansion Platform Design Types I and II', the latter demonstrated with a first example, 'PANGEA: Personalized Anti-Neoplastics for Gastro-Esophageal Adenocarcinoma'. Applying integral medium-throughput genomic and proteomic assays along with a practical biomarker assessment and treatment algorithm, 'PANGEA' attempts to address the problem of heterogeneity towards successful implementation of molecularly targeted therapies. (C) 2014 The Author. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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