Sir Peter MacCallum Department of Oncology - Research Publications

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    Alpelisib Monotherapy for PI3K-Altered, Pretreated Advanced Breast Cancer: A Phase II Study
    Savas, P ; Lo, LL ; Luen, SJ ; Blackley, EF ; Callahan, J ; Moodie, K ; van Geelen, CT ; Ko, Y-A ; Weng, C-F ; Wein, L ; Silva, MJ ; Bujak, AZ ; Yeung, MM ; Ftouni, S ; Hicks, RJ ; Francis, PA ; Lee, CK ; Dawson, S-J ; Loi, S (AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH, 2022-09-02)
    UNLABELLED: There is limited knowledge on the benefit of the α-subunit-specific PI3K inhibitor alpelisib in later lines of therapy for advanced estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) HER2- and triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). We conducted a phase II multicohort study of alpelisib monotherapy in patients with advanced PI3K pathway mutant ER+HER2- and TNBC. In the intention-to-treat ER+ cohort, the overall response rate was 30% and the clinical benefit rate was 36%. A decline in PI3K pathway mutant circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) levels from baseline to week 8 while on therapy was significantly associated with a partial response, clinical benefit, and improved progression-free-survival [HR 0.24; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.083-0.67, P = 0.0065]. Detection of ESR1 mutations at baseline in plasma was also associated with clinical benefit and improved progression-free survival (HR 0.22; 95% CI, 0.078-0.60, P = 0.003). SIGNIFICANCE: Alpelisib monotherapy displayed efficacy in heavily pretreated ER+ breast cancer with PIK3CA mutations. PIK3CA mutation dynamics in plasma during treatment and ESR1 mutations detected in plasma at baseline were candidate biomarkers predictive of benefit from alpelisib, highlighting the utility of ctDNA assays in this setting. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2007.
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    Genomic characterisation of hormone receptor-positive breast cancer arising in very young women
    Luen, SJ ; Viale, G ; Nik-Zainal, S ; Savas, P ; Kammler, R ; Dell'Orto, P ; Biasi, O ; Degasperi, A ; Brown, LC ; Lang, I ; MacGrogan, G ; Tondini, C ; Bellet, M ; Villa, F ; Bernardo, A ; Ciruelos, E ; Karlsson, P ; Neven, P ; Climent, M ; Mueller, B ; Jochum, W ; Bonnefoi, H ; Martino, S ; Davidson, NE ; Geyer, C ; Chia, SK ; Ingle, JN ; Coleman, R ; Solbach, C ; Thurlimann, B ; Colleoni, M ; Coates, AS ; Goldhirsch, A ; Fleming, GF ; Francis, PA ; Speed, TP ; Regan, MM ; Loi, S (ELSEVIER, 2023-04)
    BACKGROUND: Very young premenopausal women diagnosed with hormone receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HR+HER2-) early breast cancer (EBC) have higher rates of recurrence and death for reasons that remain largely unexplained. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Genomic sequencing was applied to HR+HER2- tumours from patients enrolled in the Suppression of Ovarian Function Trial (SOFT) to determine genomic drivers that are enriched in young premenopausal women. Genomic alterations were characterised using next-generation sequencing from a subset of 1276 patients (deep targeted sequencing, n = 1258; whole-exome sequencing in a young-age, case-control subsample, n = 82). We defined copy number (CN) subgroups and assessed for features suggestive of homologous recombination deficiency (HRD). Genomic alteration frequencies were compared between young premenopausal women (<40 years) and older premenopausal women (≥40 years), and assessed for associations with distant recurrence-free interval (DRFI) and overall survival (OS). RESULTS: Younger women (<40 years, n = 359) compared with older women (≥40 years, n = 917) had significantly higher frequencies of mutations in GATA3 (19% versus 16%) and CN amplifications (CNAs) (47% versus 26%), but significantly lower frequencies of mutations in PIK3CA (32% versus 47%), CDH1 (3% versus 9%), and MAP3K1 (7% versus 12%). Additionally, they had significantly higher frequencies of features suggestive of HRD (27% versus 21%) and a higher proportion of PIK3CA mutations with concurrent CNAs (23% versus 11%). Genomic features suggestive of HRD, PIK3CA mutations with CNAs, and CNAs were associated with significantly worse DRFI and OS compared with those without these features. These poor prognostic features were enriched in younger patients: present in 72% of patients aged <35 years, 54% aged 35-39 years, and 40% aged ≥40 years. Poor prognostic features [n = 584 (46%)] versus none [n = 692 (54%)] had an 8-year DRFI of 84% versus 94% and OS of 88% versus 96%. Younger women (<40 years) had the poorest outcomes: 8-year DRFI 74% versus 85% and OS 80% versus 93%, respectively. CONCLUSION: These results provide insights into genomic alterations that are enriched in young women with HR+HER2- EBC, provide rationale for genomic subgrouping, and highlight priority molecular targets for future clinical trials.
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    Clinical implications of prospective genomic profiling of metastatic breast cancer patients (vol 22, 91, 2020)
    van Geelen, CT ; Savas, P ; Teo, ZL ; Luen, SJ ; Weng, C-F ; Ko, Y-A ; Kuykhoven, KS ; Caramia, F ; Salgado, R ; Francis, PA ; Dawson, S-J ; Fox, SB ; Fellowes, A ; Loi, S (BMC, 2022-07-15)
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    Understanding the barriers to, and facilitators of, ovarian toxicity assessment in breast cancer clinical trials
    Cui, W ; Phillips, K-A ; Francis, PA ; Anderson, RA ; Partridge, AH ; Loi, S ; Loibl, S ; Keogh, L (CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE, 2022-08)
    BACKGROUND: Detailed toxicity data are routinely collected in breast cancer (BC) clinical trials. However, ovarian toxicity is infrequently assessed, despite the adverse impacts on fertility and long-term health from treatment-induced ovarian insufficiency. OBJECTIVES: To determine the barriers to and facilitators of ovarian toxicity assessment in BC trials of anti-cancer drugs. METHODS: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with purposively selected stakeholders from multiple countries involved in BC clinical trials (clinicians, consumers, pharmaceutical company representatives, members of drug-regulatory agencies). Participants were asked to describe the perceived benefits and barriers to evaluating ovarian toxicity. Interviews were transcribed verbatim, coded in NVivo software and analysed using inductive thematic analysis. RESULTS: Saturation of the main themes was reached and the final sample size included 25 participants from 14 countries (9 clinicians, 7 consumers, 5 members of regulatory agencies, 4 pharmaceutical company representatives); half were female. The main reported barrier to ovarian toxicity assessment was that the issue was rarely considered. Reasons included that these data are less important than survival data and are not required for regulatory approval. Overall, most participants believed evaluating the impact of BC treatments on ovarian function is valuable. Suggested strategies to increase ovarian toxicity assessment were to include it in clinical trial design guidelines and stakeholder advocacy. CONCLUSION: Lack of consideration about measuring ovarian toxicity in BC clinical trials that include premenopausal women suggest that guidelines and stronger advocacy from stakeholders, including regulators, would facilitate its more frequent inclusion in future trials, allowing women to make better informed treatment decisions.
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    Tumor infiltrating lymphocyte stratification of prognostic staging of early-stage triple negative breast cancer
    Loi, S ; Salgado, R ; Adams, S ; Pruneri, G ; Francis, PA ; Lacroix-Triki, M ; Joensuu, H ; Dieci, MV ; Badve, S ; Demaria, S ; Gray, R ; Munzone, E ; Drubay, D ; Lemonnier, J ; Sotiriou, C ; Kellokumpu-Lehtinen, PL ; Vingiani, A ; Gray, K ; Andre, F ; Denkert, C ; Piccart, M ; Roblin, E ; Michiels, S (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2022-01-11)
    The importance of integrating biomarkers into the TNM staging has been emphasized in the 8th Edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) Staging system. In a pooled analysis of 2148 TNBC-patients in the adjuvant setting, TILs are found to strongly up and downstage traditional pathological-staging in the Pathological and Clinical Prognostic Stage Groups from the AJJC 8th edition Cancer Staging System. This suggest that clinical and research studies on TNBC should take TILs into account in addition to stage, as for example patients with stage II TNBC and high TILs have a better outcome than patients with stage I and low TILs.
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    The tale of TILs in breast cancer: A report from The International Immuno-Oncology Biomarker Working Group
    El Bairi, K ; Haynes, HR ; Blackley, E ; Fineberg, S ; Shear, J ; Turner, S ; de Freitas, JR ; Sur, D ; Amendola, LC ; Gharib, M ; Kallala, A ; Arun, I ; Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F ; Fujimoto, L ; Sua, LF ; Liu, S-W ; Lien, H-C ; Kirtani, P ; Balancin, M ; El Attar, H ; Guleria, P ; Yang, W ; Shash, E ; Chen, I-C ; Bautista, V ; Do Prado Moura, JF ; Rapoport, BL ; Castaneda, C ; Spengler, E ; Acosta-Haab, G ; Frahm, I ; Sanchez, J ; Castillo, M ; Bouchmaa, N ; Zin, RRM ; Shui, R ; Onyuma, T ; Yang, W ; Husain, Z ; Willard-Gallo, K ; Coosemans, A ; Perez, EA ; Provenzano, E ; Ericsson, PG ; Richardet, E ; Mehrotra, R ; Sarancone, S ; Ehinger, A ; Rimm, DL ; Bartlett, JMS ; Viale, G ; Denkert, C ; Hida, AI ; Sotiriou, C ; Loibl, S ; Hewitt, SM ; Badve, S ; Symmans, WF ; Kim, RS ; Pruneri, G ; Goel, S ; Francis, PA ; Inurrigarro, G ; Yamaguchi, R ; Garcia-Rivello, H ; Horlings, H ; Afqir, S ; Salgado, R ; Adams, S ; Kok, M ; Dieci, MV ; Michiels, S ; Demaria, S ; Loi, S (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2021-12-01)
    The advent of immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) in modern oncology has significantly improved survival in several cancer settings. A subgroup of women with breast cancer (BC) has immunogenic infiltration of lymphocytes with expression of programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1). These patients may potentially benefit from ICI targeting the programmed death 1 (PD-1)/PD-L1 signaling axis. The use of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) as predictive and prognostic biomarkers has been under intense examination. Emerging data suggest that TILs are associated with response to both cytotoxic treatments and immunotherapy, particularly for patients with triple-negative BC. In this review from The International Immuno-Oncology Biomarker Working Group, we discuss (a) the biological understanding of TILs, (b) their analytical and clinical validity and efforts toward the clinical utility in BC, and (c) the current status of PD-L1 and TIL testing across different continents, including experiences from low-to-middle-income countries, incorporating also the view of a patient advocate. This information will help set the stage for future approaches to optimize the understanding and clinical utilization of TIL analysis in patients with BC.
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    The Subclonal Architecture of Metastatic Breast Cancer: Results from a Prospective Community-Based Rapid Autopsy Program "CASCADE"
    Savas, P ; Teo, ZL ; Lefevre, C ; Flensburg, C ; Caramia, F ; Alsop, K ; Mansour, M ; Francis, PA ; Thorne, HA ; Silva, MJ ; Kanu, N ; Dietzen, M ; Rowan, A ; Kschischo, M ; Fox, S ; Bowtell, DD ; Dawson, S-J ; Speed, TP ; Swanton, C ; Loi, S ; Ladanyi, M (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2016-12)
    BACKGROUND: Understanding the cancer genome is seen as a key step in improving outcomes for cancer patients. Genomic assays are emerging as a possible avenue to personalised medicine in breast cancer. However, evolution of the cancer genome during the natural history of breast cancer is largely unknown, as is the profile of disease at death. We sought to study in detail these aspects of advanced breast cancers that have resulted in lethal disease. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Three patients with oestrogen-receptor (ER)-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative breast cancer and one patient with triple negative breast cancer underwent rapid autopsy as part of an institutional prospective community-based rapid autopsy program (CASCADE). Cases represented a range of management problems in breast cancer, including late relapse after early stage disease, de novo metastatic disease, discordant disease response, and disease refractory to treatment. Between 5 and 12 metastatic sites were collected at autopsy together with available primary tumours and longitudinal metastatic biopsies taken during life. Samples underwent paired tumour-normal whole exome sequencing and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays. Subclonal architectures were inferred by jointly analysing all samples from each patient. Mutations were validated using high depth amplicon sequencing. Between cases, there were significant differences in mutational burden, driver mutations, mutational processes, and copy number variation. Within each case, we found dramatic heterogeneity in subclonal structure from primary to metastatic disease and between metastatic sites, such that no single lesion captured the breadth of disease. Metastatic cross-seeding was found in each case, and treatment drove subclonal diversification. Subclones displayed parallel evolution of treatment resistance in some cases and apparent augmentation of key oncogenic drivers as an alternative resistance mechanism. We also observed the role of mutational processes in subclonal evolution. Limitations of this study include the potential for bias introduced by joint analysis of formalin-fixed archival specimens with fresh specimens and the difficulties in resolving subclones with whole exome sequencing. Other alterations that could define subclones such as structural variants or epigenetic modifications were not assessed. CONCLUSIONS: This study highlights various mechanisms that shape the genome of metastatic breast cancer and the value of studying advanced disease in detail. Treatment drives significant genomic heterogeneity in breast cancers which has implications for disease monitoring and treatment selection in the personalised medicine paradigm.
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    Pitfalls in assessing stromal tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) in breast cancer
    Kos, Z ; Roblin, E ; Kim, RS ; Michiels, S ; Gallas, BD ; Chen, W ; van de Vijver, KK ; Goel, S ; Adams, S ; Demaria, S ; Viale, G ; Nielsen, TO ; Badve, SS ; Symmans, WF ; Sotiriou, C ; Rimm, DL ; Hewitt, S ; Denkert, C ; Loibl, S ; Luen, SJ ; Bartlett, JMS ; Savas, P ; Pruneri, G ; Dillon, DA ; Cheang, MCU ; Tutt, A ; Hall, JA ; Kok, M ; Horlings, HM ; Madabhushi, A ; van der Laak, J ; Ciompi, F ; Laenkholm, A-V ; Bellolio, E ; Gruosso, T ; Fox, SB ; Araya, JC ; Floris, G ; Hudecek, J ; Voorwerk, L ; Beck, AH ; Kerner, J ; Larsimont, D ; Declercq, S ; Van den Eynden, G ; Pusztai, L ; Ehinger, A ; Yang, W ; AbdulJabbar, K ; Yuan, Y ; Singh, R ; Hiley, C ; al Bakir, M ; Lazar, AJ ; Naber, S ; Wienert, S ; Castillo, M ; Curigliano, G ; Dieci, M-V ; Andre, F ; Swanton, C ; Reis-Filho, J ; Sparano, J ; Balslev, E ; Chen, I-C ; Stovgaard, EIS ; Pogue-Geile, K ; Blenman, KRM ; Penault-Llorca, F ; Schnitt, S ; Lakhani, SR ; Vincent-Salomon, A ; Rojo, F ; Braybrooke, JP ; Hanna, MG ; Soler-Monso, MT ; Bethmann, D ; Castaneda, CA ; Willard-Gallo, K ; Sharma, A ; Lien, H-C ; Fineberg, S ; Thagaard, J ; Comerma, L ; Gonzalez-Ericsson, P ; Brogi, E ; Loi, S ; Saltz, J ; Klaushen, F ; Cooper, L ; Amgad, M ; Moore, DA ; Salgado, R (NATURE RESEARCH, 2020-05-12)
    Stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) are important prognostic and predictive biomarkers in triple-negative (TNBC) and HER2-positive breast cancer. Incorporating sTILs into clinical practice necessitates reproducible assessment. Previously developed standardized scoring guidelines have been widely embraced by the clinical and research communities. We evaluated sources of variability in sTIL assessment by pathologists in three previous sTIL ring studies. We identify common challenges and evaluate impact of discrepancies on outcome estimates in early TNBC using a newly-developed prognostic tool. Discordant sTIL assessment is driven by heterogeneity in lymphocyte distribution. Additional factors include: technical slide-related issues; scoring outside the tumor boundary; tumors with minimal assessable stroma; including lymphocytes associated with other structures; and including other inflammatory cells. Small variations in sTIL assessment modestly alter risk estimation in early TNBC but have the potential to affect treatment selection if cutpoints are employed. Scoring and averaging multiple areas, as well as use of reference images, improve consistency of sTIL evaluation. Moreover, to assist in avoiding the pitfalls identified in this analysis, we developed an educational resource available at www.tilsinbreastcancer.org/pitfalls.
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    Report on computational assessment of Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes from the International Immuno-Oncology Biomarker Working Group
    Amgad, M ; Stovgaard, ES ; Balslev, E ; Thagaard, J ; Chen, W ; Dudgeon, S ; Sharma, A ; Kerner, JK ; Denkert, C ; Yuan, Y ; AbdulJabbar, K ; Wienert, S ; Savas, P ; Voorwerk, L ; Beck, AH ; Madabhushi, A ; Hartman, J ; Sebastian, MM ; Horlings, HM ; Hudecek, J ; Ciompi, F ; Moore, DA ; Singh, R ; Roblin, E ; Balancin, ML ; Mathieu, M-C ; Lennerz, JK ; Kirtani, P ; Chen, I-C ; Braybrooke, JP ; Pruneri, G ; Demaria, S ; Adams, S ; Schnitt, SJ ; Lakhani, SR ; Rojo, F ; Comerma, L ; Badve, SS ; Khojasteh, M ; Symmans, WF ; Sotiriou, C ; Gonzalez-Ericsson, P ; Pogue-Geile, KL ; Kim, RS ; Rimm, DL ; Viale, G ; Hewitt, SM ; Bartlett, JMS ; Penault-Llorca, F ; Goel, S ; Lien, H-C ; Loibl, S ; Kos, Z ; Loi, S ; Hanna, MG ; Michiels, S ; Kok, M ; Nielsen, TO ; Lazar, AJ ; Bago-Horvath, Z ; Kooreman, LFS ; van der Laak, JAWM ; Saltz, J ; Gallas, BD ; Kurkure, U ; Barnes, M ; Salgado, R ; Cooper, LAD (NATURE RESEARCH, 2020-05-12)
    Assessment of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) is increasingly recognized as an integral part of the prognostic workflow in triple-negative (TNBC) and HER2-positive breast cancer, as well as many other solid tumors. This recognition has come about thanks to standardized visual reporting guidelines, which helped to reduce inter-reader variability. Now, there are ripe opportunities to employ computational methods that extract spatio-morphologic predictive features, enabling computer-aided diagnostics. We detail the benefits of computational TILs assessment, the readiness of TILs scoring for computational assessment, and outline considerations for overcoming key barriers to clinical translation in this arena. Specifically, we discuss: 1. ensuring computational workflows closely capture visual guidelines and standards; 2. challenges and thoughts standards for assessment of algorithms including training, preanalytical, analytical, and clinical validation; 3. perspectives on how to realize the potential of machine learning models and to overcome the perceptual and practical limits of visual scoring.
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    Clinical implications of prospective genomic profiling of metastatic breast cancer patients
    van Geelen, CT ; Savas, P ; Teo, ZL ; Luen, SJ ; Weng, C-F ; Ko, Y-A ; Kuykhoven, KS ; Caramia, F ; Salgado, R ; Francis, PA ; Dawson, S-J ; Fox, SB ; Fellowes, A ; Loi, S (BMC, 2020-08-18)
    BACKGROUND: Metastatic breast cancer remains incurable. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) offers the ability to identify actionable genomic alterations in tumours which may then be matched with targeted therapies, but the implementation and utility of this approach is not well defined for patients with metastatic breast cancer. METHODS: We recruited patients with advanced breast cancer of any subtype for prospective targeted NGS of their most recent tumour samples, using a panel of 108 breast cancer-specific genes. Genes were classified as actionable or non-actionable using the European Society of Medical Oncology Scale for Clinical Actionability of Molecular Targets (ESCAT) guidelines. RESULTS: Between February 2014 and May 2019, 322 patients were enrolled onto the study, with 72% (n = 234) of patients successfully sequenced (n = 357 samples). The majority (74%, n = 171) of sequenced patients were found to carry a potentially actionable alteration, the most common being a PIK3CA mutation. Forty-three percent (n = 74) of patients with actionable alterations were referred for a clinical trial or referred for confirmatory germline testing or had a change in therapy outside of clinical trials. We found alterations in AKT1, BRCA2, CHEK2, ESR1, FGFR1, KMT2C, NCOR1, PIK3CA and TSC2 to be significantly enriched in our metastatic population compared with primary breast cancers. Concordance between primary and metastatic samples for key driver genes (TP53, ERBB2 amplification) was > 75%. Additionally, we found that patients with a higher number of mutations had a significantly worse overall survival. CONCLUSION: Genomic profiling of patients with metastatic breast cancer can have clinical implications and should be considered in all suitable patients.