TY - JOUR
T1 - Precision oncology based on omics data
T2 - The NCT Heidelberg experience
AU - Horak, Peter
AU - Klink, Barbara
AU - Heining, Christoph
AU - Gröschel, Stefan
AU - Hutter, Barbara
AU - Fröhlich, Martina
AU - Uhrig, Sebastian
AU - Hübschmann, Daniel
AU - Schlesner, Matthias
AU - Eils, Roland
AU - Richter, Daniela
AU - Pfütze, Katrin
AU - Geörg, Christina
AU - Meißburger, Bettina
AU - Wolf, Stephan
AU - Schulz, Angela
AU - Penzel, Roland
AU - Herpel, Esther
AU - Kirchner, Martina
AU - Lier, Amelie
AU - Endris, Volker
AU - Singer, Stephan
AU - Schirmacher, Peter
AU - Weichert, Wilko
AU - Stenzinger, Albrecht
AU - Schlenk, Richard F.
AU - Schröck, Evelin
AU - Brors, Benedikt
AU - von Kalle, Christof
AU - Glimm, Hanno
AU - Fröhling, Stefan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 UICC
PY - 2017/9/1
Y1 - 2017/9/1
N2 - Precision oncology implies the ability to predict which patients will likely respond to specific cancer therapies based on increasingly accurate, high-resolution molecular diagnostics as well as the functional and mechanistic understanding of individual tumors. While molecular stratification of patients can be achieved through different means, a promising approach is next-generation sequencing of tumor DNA and RNA, which can reveal genomic alterations that have immediate clinical implications. Furthermore, certain genetic alterations are shared across multiple histologic entities, raising the fundamental question of whether tumors should be treated by molecular profile and not tissue of origin. We here describe MASTER (Molecularly Aided Stratification for Tumor Eradication Research), a clinically applicable platform for prospective, biology-driven stratification of younger adults with advanced-stage cancer across all histologies and patients with rare tumors. We illustrate how a standardized workflow for selection and consenting of patients, sample processing, whole-exome/genome and RNA sequencing, bioinformatic analysis, rigorous validation of potentially actionable findings, and data evaluation by a dedicated molecular tumor board enables categorization of patients into different intervention baskets and formulation of evidence-based recommendations for clinical management. Critical next steps will be to increase the number of patients that can be offered comprehensive molecular analysis through collaborations and partnering, to explore ways in which additional technologies can aid in patient stratification and individualization of treatment, to stimulate clinically guided exploratory research projects, and to gradually move away from assessing the therapeutic activity of targeted interventions on a case-by-case basis toward controlled clinical trials of genomics-guided treatments.
AB - Precision oncology implies the ability to predict which patients will likely respond to specific cancer therapies based on increasingly accurate, high-resolution molecular diagnostics as well as the functional and mechanistic understanding of individual tumors. While molecular stratification of patients can be achieved through different means, a promising approach is next-generation sequencing of tumor DNA and RNA, which can reveal genomic alterations that have immediate clinical implications. Furthermore, certain genetic alterations are shared across multiple histologic entities, raising the fundamental question of whether tumors should be treated by molecular profile and not tissue of origin. We here describe MASTER (Molecularly Aided Stratification for Tumor Eradication Research), a clinically applicable platform for prospective, biology-driven stratification of younger adults with advanced-stage cancer across all histologies and patients with rare tumors. We illustrate how a standardized workflow for selection and consenting of patients, sample processing, whole-exome/genome and RNA sequencing, bioinformatic analysis, rigorous validation of potentially actionable findings, and data evaluation by a dedicated molecular tumor board enables categorization of patients into different intervention baskets and formulation of evidence-based recommendations for clinical management. Critical next steps will be to increase the number of patients that can be offered comprehensive molecular analysis through collaborations and partnering, to explore ways in which additional technologies can aid in patient stratification and individualization of treatment, to stimulate clinically guided exploratory research projects, and to gradually move away from assessing the therapeutic activity of targeted interventions on a case-by-case basis toward controlled clinical trials of genomics-guided treatments.
KW - clinical trial design
KW - next-generation sequencing
KW - personalized medicine
KW - precision oncology
KW - whole-exome sequencing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85021278582&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/ijc.30828
DO - 10.1002/ijc.30828
M3 - Article
C2 - 28597939
AN - SCOPUS:85021278582
SN - 0020-7136
VL - 141
SP - 877
EP - 886
JO - International Journal of Cancer
JF - International Journal of Cancer
IS - 5
ER -