Frontiers in Oncology (Feb 2024)

Molecular screening with liquid biopsy for anti-EGFR retreatment in metastatic colorectal cancer: preliminary data from the randomized phase 2 PARERE trial

  • Marco Maria Germani,
  • Marco Maria Germani,
  • Guglielmo Vetere,
  • Guglielmo Vetere,
  • Mirella Giordano,
  • Mirella Giordano,
  • Paolo Ciracì,
  • Paolo Ciracì,
  • Iolanda Capone,
  • Elena Tamborini,
  • Elena Conca,
  • Adele Busico,
  • Filippo Pietrantonio,
  • Vittoria Matilde Piva,
  • Vittoria Matilde Piva,
  • Alessandra Boccaccino,
  • Alessandra Boccaccino,
  • Francesca Simionato,
  • Martina Bortolot,
  • Martina Bortolot,
  • Paolo Manca,
  • Sara Lonardi,
  • Veronica Conca,
  • Veronica Conca,
  • Beatrice Borelli,
  • Beatrice Borelli,
  • Martina Carullo,
  • Martina Carullo,
  • Marzia Del Re,
  • Gabriella Fontanini,
  • Daniele Rossini,
  • Daniele Rossini,
  • Chiara Cremolini,
  • Chiara Cremolini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1307545
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundRetreatment with anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies is a promising strategy in patients with RAS/BRAF wild-type (wt) metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) who achieved benefit from previous anti-EGFR exposure upon exclusion of mutations in RAS/BRAF genes according to circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis by means of liquid biopsy (LB). This treatment approach is now being investigated in the randomized phase II trial PARERE (NCT04787341). We here present preliminary findings of molecular screening.MethodsPatients with RAS/BRAFV600E wt mCRC according to tissue genotyping who benefited from previous anti-EGFR-based treatment (fluoropyrimidines, oxaliplatin, irinotecan, and antiangiogenics) and then experienced disease progression to EGFR targeting were eligible for screening in the PARERE trial. The next-generation sequencing (NGS) panel Oncomine™ was employed for ctDNA testing.ResultsA total of 218 patients underwent LB, and ctDNA sequencing was successful in 201 of them (92%). RAS/BRAFV600E mutations were found in 68 (34%) patients and were mainly subclonal (median variant allele fraction [VAF] for KRAS, NRAS, and BRAF mutant clones: 0.52%, 0.62%, and 0.12%, respectively; p = 0.01), with KRASQ61H being the most frequently detected (31%). Anti-EGFR-free intervals did not predict ctDNA molecular status (p = 0.12). Among the 133 patients with RAS/BRAFV600E wt tumors according to LB, 40 (30%) harbored a mutation in at least another gene potentially implied in anti-EGFR resistance, mainly with subclonal expression (median VAF, 0.56%). In detail, alterations in PIK3CA, FBXW7, GNAS, MAP2K, ERBB2, BRAF (class I and II non-BRAFV600E), SMAD, EGFR, AKT1, and CTNNB1 occurred in 13%, 8%, 7%, 3%, 2%, 2%, 1%, 1%, 1%, and 1% cases, respectively. Co-mutations were detected in 13 (33%) out of 40 patients.ConclusionsThis is the largest prospective cohort of mCRC patients screened with LB for anti-EGFR retreatment in a randomized study. ctDNA genotyping reveals that at least one out of three patients candidate for retreatment should be excluded from this therapy, and other potential drivers of anti-EGFR resistance are found in approximately one out of three patients with RAS/BRAFV600E wt ctDNA.

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