Abstract

Personalized circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis in patients with recurrent/metastatic head and neck squamous cell cancer (R/M HNSCC).

Author
person Kirsty Taylor Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada info_outline Kirsty Taylor, Jinfeng Zou, Marcos Aurelio Fonseca Magalhaes Filho, Karen Howarth, Giovanni Marsico, Samantha Terrell, Gregory Jones, Charlene Knape, Tim Forshew, Marc Oliva, Anna Spreafico, Aaron Richard Hansen, Simon McDade, Victoria M. Coyle, Mark Lawler, Elena Elimova, Scott Victor Bratman, Lillian L. Siu
Full text
Authors person Kirsty Taylor Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada info_outline Kirsty Taylor, Jinfeng Zou, Marcos Aurelio Fonseca Magalhaes Filho, Karen Howarth, Giovanni Marsico, Samantha Terrell, Gregory Jones, Charlene Knape, Tim Forshew, Marc Oliva, Anna Spreafico, Aaron Richard Hansen, Simon McDade, Victoria M. Coyle, Mark Lawler, Elena Elimova, Scott Victor Bratman, Lillian L. Siu Organizations Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada, Inivata Ltd, Cambridge, United Kingdom, Inivata Inc., Research Triangle Park, NC, Queens University Belfast, Belfast, United Kingdom, Department of Radiation Oncology, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada Abstract Disclosures Research Funding Other Pharmaceutical/Biotech Company Background: Immuno-oncology agents (IO) have become standard-of-care in the treatment of R/M HNSCC, but only a subset of patients (pts) benefit. Highly sensitive quantification of plasma circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) may permit real time assessment of disease under selective pressures of treatment. Methods: R/M HNSCC pts treated with platinum-based chemotherapy (CT) or IO (anti-PD1/L1 +/- second IO) underwent serial ctDNA collection pre-cycles 1/2/3 and at disease progression, corresponding to timepoints (T) 1-4. T1 was considered baseline. Whole exome sequencing of pt tumor tissue identified patient specific somatic variants which were used as targets for RaDaR, a personalized multiplexed PCR-based NGS assay. Matched buffy coat DNA was sequenced to filter germline mutations and identify confounding CHIP. RaDaR was applied at each available T, an estimated variant allele frequency (eVAF) was calculated and correlated with progression free- (PFS) and overall- survival (OS). Findings were compared against prior (ESMO 2021) data generated using a fixed 580 gene CAPP-seq (CAncer Personalized Profiling by deep Sequencing) panel designed specifically against squamous cell carcinoma. Results: A total 114 plasma samples from 38 pts were analyzed. Of 35 pts with ctDNA detected at T1 and/or T2, 26 received IO and 9 CT. Median age was 62 (20-84), 77% were male, 69% prior smokers and 26% HPV positive. Median PFS and OS, for all 35 pts, was 2.57 mo (95% CI 0.48-4.66) and 8.37 mo (95% CI 5.42-11.32) respectively. For IO treated pts, median PFS was 2.45 mo (95% CI 0-5.18) and median OS 7.38 mo (95% CI 3.84-10.93). RaDaR panels targeted a median 48 variants (17-50). ctDNA was detected in 35/38 (92%) patients at baseline, with median eVAF 0.345% (range 0.0004% - 43.37%). ctDNA abundance at baseline did not correlate with PFS or OS. A decrease in Δ eVAF from T1 to T2, by > 30%, or > 50% identified pts with improved PFS, with HR 0.45 (0.21, 0.96) p = 0.04, 0.31 (0.14, 0.70) p < 0.01, and 0.23 (0.10, 0.56) p < 0.01, respectively. Similar results were observed for the 26 IO pts, with HR 0.40 (0.16, 1.03) p = 0.06, 0.19 (0.05, 0.66) p < 0.01, and 0.06 (0.01, 0.47) p < 0.01, respectively. A similar, but non-significant, trend was seen in median OS for pts with a decrease vs. increase in Δ eVAF (T1 to 2), 8.8 mo vs 7.3 mo (HR = 0.87 (0.42, 1.79)). For 31 pts, a comparison of Δ ctDNA levels, based on personalized RaDaR vs. CAPP-seq assays, from T1 to T2 demonstrated a correlation coefficient of R = 0.57, P < 0.01. Conclusions: In pts with R/M HNSCC, a decrease in ctDNA eVAF after first treatment correlated with improved PFS. There was a significant correlation between fixed CAPP-seq and personalized RaDaR assays when comparing Δ in ctDNA levels. Clinical Trial: NCT03712566.