Open Access
Open access
BMC Medical Genomics, volume 14, issue 1, publication number 105

Comprehensive tumor molecular profile analysis in clinical practice

Mustafa Ozdogan 1
Eirini Papadopoulou 2
Nikolaos Tsoulos 2
Aikaterini Tsantikidi 2
Vasiliki Metaxa Mariatou 2
Georgios Tsaousis 2
Evgenia Kapeni 2
Evgenia Bourkoula 2
Dimitrios Fotiou 2
Georgios Kapetsis 2
Ioannis Boukovinas 3
Nikolaos Touroutoglou 4
Athanasios Fassas 5
Achilleas Adamidis 5
Paraskevas Kosmidis 6
Dimitrios Trafalis 7
ELENI GALANI 8
George Lypas 9
Bülent Orhan 10
Sualp Tansan 11
Tahsin Özatlı 12
Onder Kırca 1
Okan Çakır 13
George Nasioulas 2
Show full list: 24 authors
1
 
Division of Medical Oncology, Memorial Hospital, Antalya, Turkey
2
 
Genekor Medical S.A, Athens, Greece
3
 
Bioclinic Thessaloniki, Thessaloníki, Greece
4
 
Department of Medical Oncology, Interbalkan Medical Center, Thessaloníki, Greece
5
 
St. Luke’s Hospital, Thessaloníki, Greece
6
 
Second Department of Medical Oncology, Hygeia Hospital, Athens, Greece
7
 
Henry Dunant Hospital Center, Athina, Greece
8
 
Second Department of Medical Oncology, “Metropolitan” Hospital, Piraeus, Greece
9
 
Department of Genetic Oncology/Medical Oncology, Hygeia Hospital, Athens, Greece
10
 
Department of Medical Oncology, Ceylan International Hospital, Bursa, Turkey
11
 
Tansan Oncology, Istanbul, Turkey
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-04-14
scimago Q2
SJR0.703
CiteScore3.9
Impact factor2.1
ISSN17558794
Genetics
Genetics (clinical)
Abstract
Tumor molecular profile analysis by Next Generation Sequencing technology is currently widely applied in clinical practice and has enabled the detection of predictive biomarkers of response to targeted treatment. In parallel with targeted therapies, immunotherapies are also evolving, revolutionizing cancer therapy, with Programmed Death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), Microsatellite instability (MSI), and Tumor Mutational Burden (TMB) analysis being the biomarkers employed most commonly. In the present study, tumor molecular profile analysis was performed using a 161 gene NGS panel, containing the majority of clinically significant genes for cancer treatment selection. A variety of tumor types have been analyzed, including aggressive and hard to treat cancers such as pancreatic cancer. Besides, the clinical utility of immunotherapy biomarkers (TMB, MSI, PD-L1), was also studied. Molecular profile analysis was conducted in 610 cancer patients, while in 393 of them a at least one biomarker for immunotherapy response was requested. An actionable alteration was detected in 77.87% of the patients. 54.75% of them received information related to on-label or off-label treatment (Tiers 1A.1, 1A.2, 2B, and 2C.1) and 21.31% received a variant that could be used for clinical trial inclusion. The addition to immunotherapy biomarker to targeted biomarkers’ analysis in 191 cases increased the number of patients with an on-label treatment recommendation by 22.92%, while an option for on-label or off-label treatment was provided in 71.35% of the cases. Tumor molecular profile analysis using NGS is a first-tier method for a variety of tumor types and provides important information for decision making in the treatment of cancer patients. Importantly, simultaneous analysis for targeted therapy and immunotherapy biomarkers could lead to better tumor characterization and offer actionable information in the majority of patients. Furthermore, our data suggest that one in two patients may be eligible for on-label ICI treatment based on biomarker analysis. However, appropriate interpretation of results from such analysis is essential for implementation in clinical practice and accurate refinement of treatment strategy.

Top-30

Journals

1
1

Publishers

1
2
3
4
1
2
3
4
  • We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
  • Statistics recalculated only for publications connected to researchers, organizations and labs registered on the platform.
  • Statistics recalculated weekly.

Are you a researcher?

Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Share
Cite this
GOST | RIS | BibTex
Found error?