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Advances in mutation testing: novel
samples and new methodologies
Professor Ian A Cree
Warwick Medical School
[email protected]
One size fits all?
Treatment A > B
All get A in future
A
B
Standards – Analytical
•
•
•
•
•
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•
Pre-analytical handling?
Right test for the patient?
Right turnaround time?
Reflex testing?
Right technology?
Accuracy and precision?
Quality controls met?
Overview
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•
•
•
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EGFR mutations and beyond…
Pre-analytical issues
Techniques in clinical practice
New methods for mutation testing
Alternative samples for mutation testing
Implications – colorectal cancer
Overview
•
•
•
•
•
•
EGFR mutations and beyond…
Pre-analytical issues
Techniques in clinical practice
New methods for mutation testing
Alternative samples for mutation testing
Implications – colorectal cancer
Lung cancer genetics – increasing complexity
Incidence of individual mutations for western
NSCLC (adenocarcinoma)
19.2
20.1
1.4
1.3
3.3
6
6.4
After Dearden et al., Ann Oncol 2013.
26.1
EGFRa
KRASa
EML4-ALK
PTENa
BRAFa
PIK3CA
ErbB2
Unknown
Lung cancer genetics – increasing complexity
Incidence of individual mutations for asian NSCLC
(adenocarcinoma)
23.8
47.9
2.8
1.7
1.6
1.6
5.4
11.2
After Dearden et al., Ann Oncol 2013.
EGFRa
KRASa
EML4-ALK
PTENa
BRAFa
PIK3CA
ErbB2
Unknown
Lung cancer genetics – increasing complexity
Incidence of individual mutations for western NSCLC
(SCC)
0.2
3.3
6.4
4.5
0
1.4
1.7
73
After Dearden et al., Ann Oncol 2013.
EGFRa
KRASa
EML4-ALK
PTENa
BRAFa
PIK3CA
ErbB2
Unknown
gefitinib
erlotinib
afatinib
Icotinib
cetuximab
EGF
trastuzumab
crizotinib
onartuzumab
HER
bevacizumab
HGF
IGF
VEGF
MET
IGFR
VEGFR
EML-ALK4
RAF
RAS
PI3
K
PTEN
selumetinib
MEK
AK
T
ERK
HIF1α
mTOR
p70 S6K
Growth
everolimus
sirolimus
Apoptosis
Angiogenesis
Overview
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•
•
•
•
•
EGFR mutations and beyond…
Pre-analytical issues
Techniques in clinical practice
New methods for mutation testing
Alternative samples for mutation testing
Implications – colorectal cancer
Sample pathway
Surgeon
• Patient is main concern
• Specimen pot
• Labelling and request
Nurse
• Not main job
• Ensures dispatch
Porter
• Variable availability
• Time is not an issue…
Pathology
Reception
• Home at last?
Tissue selection
• Histopathologist’s input is critical – is there any
cancer in the sample you’re testing?
• Microdissection – handle with care…
• Define the % neoplastic cells – not % tumour!
DNA extraction
• Multiple methods available:
•
•
– Filter-based
– Magnetic beads
MaxwellTM (Promega) – automated extraction from
FFPE punches or sections/scrapings
DNA content – NanodropTM, QubitTM
FFPE, formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded
Overview
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•
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•
EGFR mutations and beyond…
Pre-analytical issues
Techniques in clinical practice
New methods for mutation testing
Alternative samples for mutation testing
Implications – colorectal cancer
Current methods for mutation testing
• Sequencing
– Sanger, Pyrosequencing, next-generation
– All demand considerable molecular expertise, but
coverage of possible mutations is better
• PCR
– Keep it simple!
– cobas (Roche) and Therascreen (Qiagen) are
popular and cover most of the mutations for which
clinical response is established
PCR, polymerase chain reaction
Molecular analysis of EGFR in NSCLC EQA
20
Number of laboratories
18
16
14
12
10
8
2010
2011
2012
2013
6
4
2
0
Methods
ARMS, amplification refractory mutation system; EQA, external quality
assurance; HRM, high resolution melt; PCR, polymerase chain reaction
UK NEQAS
Overview
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•
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EGFR mutations and beyond…
Pre-analytical issues
Techniques in clinical practice
New methods for mutation testing
Alternative samples for mutation testing
Implications – colorectal cancer
IonTorrent next-generation
sequencing
OncoNetwork Consortium: a European Collaborative Research
study on the development of a colon and lung cancer genes
hot spot panel with Ion AmpliSeq™ technology on the Ion
PGM™ sequencer
www.invitrogen.com
Whole Genome Sequencing
• P1 chip – 165 million sensors
• £1,000 genome by end of year
Adenocarcinoma with positive staining for EGFR
exon 21 L858R mutation-specific antibody (x200)
Cooper W A et al. J Clin Pathol Published Online First: 11 June 2013
doi:10.1136/jclinpath-2013-201607
Copyright © by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Association of Clinical Pathologists. All rights reserved.
Introducing new assays
• Analytical validation – is it true?
• Clinical validation – is it meaningful?
• Clinical utility – is it useful?
– Health outcome
– Effect on patient pathways
– Health economic modelling
– Direct comparison with current technology
– Incremental change in test vs current practice
• Quality assurance and accreditation
Overview
•
•
•
•
•
EGFR mutations and beyond…
Pre-analytical issues
Techniques in clinical practice
New methods for mutation testing
Alternative samples for mutation
testing
• Implications – colorectal cancer
Size matters?
Mutations,
methylation
Metabolic
changes
Cytokines
& receptors
Protein degradation
products
miRNA
DNA fragments
Growth
Angiogenesis
Circulating
endothelial cells
Invasion &
metastasis
Cell death
Tumour
Exosomes
Antigenicity
Circulating
tumour cells
Auto-antibodies
Collagen degradation
products
Immune response
Cree IA. Improved blood tests for cancer screening: general or specific? BMC Cancer. 2011; 11: 499
Plasma ctDNA
• Detection of EGFR mutations in circulating
tumour DNA in the blood plasma or serum of
NSCLC cancer patients is feasible
• This can overcome:
– Known heterogeneity of mutations within tumours
– Lack of tissue availability from patients
– Development of new mutations during tumour
progression
• Methods now include targeted or even whole
exome next generation sequencing
Overview
•
•
•
•
•
•
EGFR mutations and beyond…
Pre-analytical issues
Techniques in clinical practice
New methods for mutation testing
Alternative samples for mutation testing
Implications – colorectal cancer
Colorectal Cancer
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Colorectal cancers (CRC) use the EGFR pathway to
grow
CRC express EGFR protein but activating mutations are
rare and small molecule inhibitors are not active
However, antibodies against the extracellular domain of
EGFR are active
Downstream mutations in signalling pathways can alter
the sensitivity of CRC to EGFR antibodies
Mutations in KRAS and probably BRAF are common
known examples
EGFR pathway
http://www.newevidence.com/oncology/entries/Panitumumab_response_is_dependent_on_KRAS/
prognostic role of PIK3CA and BRAF, in a study including 586
patients by Barault et al., decreased rates of 3-year survival were
associated with mutations of at least one gene among KRAS, BRAF
and PIK3CA [36]. A recent report by Tol et al. found that the
presence of the BRAF V600E mutation was a negative prognostic
Nicolantonio
et with
al.,metastatic
PLOS One
2009)
marker in 516 patients
colorectal
cancer treated
Testing Strategy
(Di
changing. Importantly, we found th
mCRC non-responders do not harbor
PIK3CA nor loss of PTEN expression
these tumors as ‘‘quadruple negative
quadruple negative patients may be
including but not restricted to: a) the
UK KRAS testing rates lag far behind
our EU peers
Proportion of mCRC patients receiving a KRAS test in the last 6 months
2012
2011
% of physicians
EU4
France
Germany
Italy
Spain
UK
EU4
100%
100%
90%
90%
80%
80%
70%
70%
60%
60%
50%
50%
40%
40%
30%
30%
20%
20%
10%
10%
0%
France
Germany
Italy
Spain
UK
0%
0%
20%
40%
60%
% of patients tested
Cumulative
80%
100%
0%
20%
40%
60%
% of patients tested
Cumulative
Q17: What percentage of your mCRC patients have had a KRAS test in the last 6 months? (Base: EU4 oncology sample, 2011=358, 2012=350)
Source 2012 KRAS biomarker survey – The Research Partnership November 2012
80%
100%
Testing and Chemotherapy
KRAS mut
Test results not available yet
Not tested
KRAS wt
Test results invalid / undetermined
Cetuximab
Cetuximab
Bevacizumab
10
43
Bevacizumab
24
54
No MAB
27
No MAB
3
67
36
Panitumumab
Panitumumab
11
35
54
Cetuximab
20
Bevacizumab
26
No MAB
% of patients
Base: All patients (320)
Q.230 KRAS outcome Q.272 Which chemotherapy treatment (cytotoxic and/or targeted therapy) does
this patient currently take?
Panitumumab
1
Conclusions
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Molecular analysis of cancer is required to optimise
patient treatment
Pre-analytical issues are a major concern
There is a wide choice of analytical method – but
quality must be assured
New methods such as next generation sequencing
show immense promise for the future
Liquid biopsy is coming of age and will change
practice – it will enable oncologists to use drugs
intelligently to combat changes in individual
cancers as they happen
Thank you!
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David Snead
Judith Timms
Anne Reiman