4.6 Article

Molecular Profiles of Advanced Urological Cancers in the PERMED-01 Precision Medicine Clinical Trial

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14092275

Keywords

advanced urological cancers; mutation; PERMED-01 trial; precision medicine; sequencing; array-CGH; t-NGS

Categories

Funding

  1. SIRIC, label Ligue
  2. Association La Marie-Do
  3. Fondation Groupe EDF
  4. Centre d'Investigations Cliniques [CICp1409]
  5. Ruban Rose

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This study identified actionable genetic alterations in advanced urological cancers through molecular profiling of tumor samples. Patients who received matched therapy based on the identified alterations showed higher disease control rates and overall survival.
Simple Summary The goal of precision medicine is to deliver therapy matched to a relevant actionable genetic alteration (AGA) identified in the tumor. Few data are available regarding precision medicine in advanced urological cancers (AUC), the prognosis of which remains unfavorable. Sixty-four patients with refractory AUC were enrolled in the PERMED-01 clinical trial and underwent a tumor biopsy that was then profiled using sophisticated molecular analyses. The results were discussed in real-time during a weekly molecular tumor board meeting, and patients with a relevant AGA became candidates for an eventual matched therapy. A complete molecular profile was obtained in 77% of cases and an AGA was identified in 59%. Nineteen percent of patients received a matched therapy on progression, of which 42% showed a clinical benefit. The objective response, disease control rates, and the 6-year overall survival were higher in the matched therapy group than in the non-matched therapy group. Introduction. The prognosis of advanced urological cancers (AUC) remains unfavorable, and few data are available regarding precision medicine. Methods: the PERMED-01 prospective clinical trial assessed the impact of molecular profiling in adults with refractory advanced solid cancer, in terms of number of patients with tumor actionable genetic alterations (AGA), feasibility, description of molecular alterations, treatment, and clinical outcome. We present here those results in the 64 patients enrolled with AUC. DNA extracted from a new tumor biopsy was profiled in real-time (targeted NGS, whole-genome array-comparative genomic hybridization), and the results were discussed during a weekly molecular tumor board meeting. Results: a complete molecular profile was obtained in 49 patients (77%). Thirty-eight (59%) had at least one AGA. Twelve (19%) received a matched therapy on progression, of which 42% had a PFS2/PFS1 ratio >= 1.3 versus 5% in the non-matched therapy group (n = 25). The objective response and disease control rates were higher in the matched therapy group (33% and 58%, respectively) than in the non-matched therapy group (13% and 22%), as was the 6-month OS (75% vs. 42%). Conclusion: the profiling of a newly biopsied tumor sample identified AGA in 59% of patients with AUC, led to matched therapy in 19%, and provided clinical benefit in 8%.

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