Cancer Treatment and Research Communications (Jan 2021)

Research Related Tumour Biopsies in Early-Phase Trials with Simultaneous Molecular Characterisation – a Single Unit Experience

  • Andrea Biondo,
  • Abhijit Pal,
  • Ruth Riisnaes,
  • Rajiv Shinde,
  • Crescens Tiu,
  • Fran Lockie,
  • Chloe Baker,
  • Claudia Bertan,
  • Mateus Crespo,
  • Ana Ferreira,
  • Rita Pereira,
  • Ines Figueiredo,
  • Susana Miranda,
  • Bora Gurel,
  • Suzanne Carreira,
  • Udai Banerji,
  • Johann de Bono,
  • Juanita Lopez,
  • Nina Tunariu,
  • Anna Minchom

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27
p. 100309

Abstract

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ABSTRACT: Early-phase cancer clinical trials are becoming increasingly accessible for patients with advanced cancer who have exhausted standard treatment options and later phase trial options. Many of these trials mandate research tissue biopsies. Research biopsies have been perceived as ethically fraught due to the perception of potential coercion of vulnerable human subjects. We performed an audit of two years of practice to assess the safety of ultrasound (US)-guided research biopsies, and to look at the yield of a simultaneous tumour next-generation sequencing (NGS) and immunohistochemistry (IHC) molecular characterisation programme. We show that in our institution, US-guided research biopsies were safe, produced adequate tumour content and in a selected subset who underwent in-house NGS sequencing, showed a high rate of actionable mutations with 30% having a Tier 1 variant. Nevertheless, these research biopsies may only provide direct benefit for a minority of patients and we conclude with a reflection on the importance of obtaining truly informed consent.

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