Clinical implications of genomic variants identified in over 30,000 advanced-stage cancer patients by next-generation sequencing of circulating tumor DNA
AmirAli Talasaz, Co-Founder, President & COO, Guardant Health
Next-generation sequencing (NGS) of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA)
enables non-invasive profiling of solid tumor cancers. Over the past few
years, research and clinical practice guidelines have highlighted a
role for liquid biopsy in patient care. In addition, liquid biopsies are
becoming essential for successful patient enrollment in clinical
trials, where tissue access and high rate of failures have been limiting
factors slowing enrollment. In this talk, we characterize somatic
genomic profiles derived from over 35,000 plasma samples from advanced
cancer patients as were determined by a ctDNA NGS test targeting up to
73 genes (Guardant360®). Accuracy of ctDNA-detected driver alterations
(PPV) was assessed by comparing to available matched tissue tests for
646 patients (lung, colon, and other cancer types). A pooled response
rate analysis was performed across 11 published/pre-press datasets
analyzing response to Guardant360®-directed therapy. Use of liquid
biopsies is increasing in clinical care, providing an option of
obtaining genomic information non-invasively. This dataset, derived from
liquid biopsy use in clinical practice, highlights the clinical impact
of identifying alterations that are targetable by drugs with regulatory
approval, including emergent resistance alterations, as well as novel
targets.
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