Incorporation of next-generation sequencing into routine clinical care to direct treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma

NG Chau, YY Li, VY Jo, G Rabinowits, JH Lorch… - Clinical cancer …, 2016 - AACR
NG Chau, YY Li, VY Jo, G Rabinowits, JH Lorch, RB Tishler, DN Margalit, JD Schoenfeld
Clinical cancer research, 2016AACR
Purpose: The clinical impact of next-generation sequencing (NGS) in patients with head and
neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) has not been described. We aimed to evaluate the
clinical impact of NGS in the routine care of patients with HNSCC and to correlate genomic
alterations with clinical outcomes. Experimental Design: Single-center study examining
targeted NGS platform used to sequence tumor DNA obtained from 213 HNSCC patients
evaluated in outpatient head and neck oncology clinic between August 2011 and December …
Abstract
Purpose: The clinical impact of next-generation sequencing (NGS) in patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) has not been described. We aimed to evaluate the clinical impact of NGS in the routine care of patients with HNSCC and to correlate genomic alterations with clinical outcomes.
Experimental Design: Single-center study examining targeted NGS platform used to sequence tumor DNA obtained from 213 HNSCC patients evaluated in outpatient head and neck oncology clinic between August 2011 and December 2014. We correlated tumor genomic profiling results with clinical outcomes.
Results: PI3K/RTK pathway activation occurred frequently [activating PIK3CA mutation or amplification (13%), PTEN inactivation (3%), RAS activation (6%), EGFR or ERBB2 activation (9%)]. Alterations in pathways affecting cell-cycle regulation [CCND1 amplification (9%), CDKN2A inactivation (17%), BRCA2 inactivation (2%)] and squamous differentiation [NOTCH1 inactivation (8%) andEP300 inactivation (6%)] were identified. PIK3CA amplification (n = 43), not PIK3CA mutation, was associated with significantly poorer progression-free survival (P = 0.0006). Oncogenic RAS mutations (n = 13) were associated with significantly poorer progression-free survival (P = 0.0001) and lower overall survival (P = 0.003). Eight patients with advanced, treatment-refractory HNSCC enrolled on clinical trials matched to tumor profiling results, and 50% achieved a partial response.
Conclusions: Incorporation of NGS clinical assays into the routine care of patients with HNSCC is feasible and may readily facilitate enrollment into clinical trials of targeted therapy with a higher likelihood of success. Data can be utilized for discovery of genomic biomarkers of outcome. PIK3CA amplification and RAS mutations were frequently identified and associated with poorer prognosis in this cohort. Clin Cancer Res; 22(12); 2939–49. ©2016 AACR.
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