Frontiers in Oncology (Nov 2023)

Genomic alterations associated with pseudoprogression and hyperprogressive disease during anti-PD1 treatment for advanced non-small-cell lung cancer

  • Rui Zhou,
  • Rui Zhou,
  • Fan Tong,
  • Fan Tong,
  • Yongchang Zhang,
  • Ruigang Zhang,
  • Ruigang Zhang,
  • Yawen Bin,
  • Yawen Bin,
  • Sheng Zhang,
  • Sheng Zhang,
  • Nong Yang,
  • Xiaorong Dong,
  • Xiaorong Dong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1231094
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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IntroductionThis study aimed to elucidate the relationship between dynamic genomic mutation alteration and pseudoprogression (PsPD)/hyperprogressive disease (HPD) in immunotherapy-treated advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), to provide clinical evidence for identifying and distinguishing between PsPD and HPD.MethodPatients with advanced NSCLC who were treated with anti-PD1 were enrolled. Whole blood was collected at baseline and post image progression. Serum was separated and sequenced using 425-panel next-generation sequencing analysis (NGS).ResultsNGS revealed that not only single gene mutations were associated with PsPD/HPD before treatment, dynamic monitoring of the whole-blood genome mutation spectrum also varied greatly. Mutational burden, allele frequency%, and relative circulating tumor DNA abundance indicated that the fold change after image progression was much higher in the HPD group.DiscussionThe gene mutation profiles of PsPD and HPD not only differed before treatment, but higher genome mutation spectrum post image progression indicated true disease progression in patients with HPD. This suggests that dynamic whole-genome mutation profile monitoring as NGS can distinguish PsPD from HPD more effectively than single gene detection, providing a novel method for guiding clinical immune treatment.

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