Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

DNA diagnosis of lung cancer

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "DNA diagnosis of lung cancer"— Presentation transcript:

1 DNA diagnosis of lung cancer
Patrick Willems GENDIA Antwerp, Belgium

2 Treatment of Lung Cancer
Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) chemotherapy radiation Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) surgery targeted treatment immunotherapy

3

4 Personalized cancer treatment
Immunotherapy to stimulate immune response to cancer PD-1 inhibitors PD-L1 inhibitors CTLA-4 inhibitors Targeted therapy with designer drugs that target the genetic cause of the tumor mAB: Herceptin TKI: Gleevec

5 Problems in personalized cancer treatment
Immunotherapy Extremely expensive ( Euro/year) Few biomarkers (companion diagnostics) Targeted therapy with designer drugs Very expensive ( Euro/year) Biomarkers (companion diagnostics)

6 Problems in personalized cancer treatment
The very high cost of personalised treatment makes companion diagnostics (cancer biomarkers) necessary

7

8 Cancer biomarkers tumor material (biopsy) blood (liquid biopsy)

9 Market for tumor biomarkers in Liquid biopsies
TARGETS DRUGS SEQUENCING Liquid biopsy market for tumor biomarkers: 40 Billion USD per year (Illumina estimate)

10 Current paradigm PATIENT PHYSICIAN PATHOLOGIST general treatment visit
Result Pathological studies sample PATHOLOGIST Lab

11 Future paradigm PATIENT PHYSICIAN PHARMA LAB Personalised treatment
visit PHYSICIAN PHARMA Result Molecular testing sample LAB Pathologist

12 Mortality UK,

13 Cancer Morbidity and Mortality
Canada, 2007

14 New cancers per year in Belgium
Lung : Colon : Prostate : Breast : TOTAAL :

15 Lung cancer 14 % of all cancer
80 % is non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) Belgium : new cases per year Worldwide : 10 million new cases per year Worldwide : 8 million fatalities per year   The main cause (20-30%) of cancer-related death in both men and women : More women die of lung ca than breast, cervical and uterine ca combined. More men die of lung ca than prostate and colorectal ca combined. Lung cancer

16 Treatment of Lung Cancer
Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) chemotherapy Radiation Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) surgery radiation immunotherapy personalised targeted treatment

17 Immunotherapy for NSCLC
CTLA-4 (cytotoxic T-lymphocyte–associated antigen 4) : ipilimumab PD-1 (programmed death-1) : nivolumab, pembrolizumab PD-L1 (programmed death-1 ligand) BMS , MPDL3280A

18 Inhibition immune checkpoints

19 Biomarkers for immunotherapy for Lung Ca
Few biomarkers for immunotherapy First real biomarker : Tumor load (amount of mutations-driver and passenger) Response to pembrolizumab (PD-1 inhibitor) better if high mutation load Science, April 3, 2015 (Rizvi et al)

20 MSI as Biomarker for immunotherapy
MMR deficiency Genomic instability Large mutation load in tumor (driver and passenger) Many mutant proteins - neoantgens Immune response

21 Immunotherapy for NSCLC
Extremely expensive ( Euro/year) No biomarkers to select patients

22 Targeted therapy with designer drugs
Receptor antibodies (---- ab) HER2 : Trastuzumab (Herceptin) EGFR : Cetuximab, Pertuzumab MET : AMG102 VEGF : Befacizumab Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors : TKI (---- ib) BRC-ABL : Imatinib (Gleevec) KRAS : Tipifarnib BRAF : Sorafenib MEK ERK mTOR : Everolimus

23 Receptor antibodies inhibit receptor kinases
by interfering with ligand-receptor binding Preventing intracellular signaling Receptor antibodies

24 Herceptin (Trastuzumab) Inhibits HER2 dimerisation / activation
and the downstream signaling pathways MAPK and AKT/mTOR Active when there is HER2 overexpression Breast ca (25 %) Gastric ca (20 %) Herceptin

25 Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI)
TKI inhibits a Tyrosine kinase by binding to its kinase domain Preventing phosphorylation (activation) of target

26 Gleevec Gleevec (Imatinib) inhibits Tyrosine kinases
by binding to its kinase domain Thereby preventing phosphorylation (activation) of targets : BCR-ABL (CML) cKIT (GIST, Mastocytosis) PDGFR (GIST)

27 Targeted treatment Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) surgery
radiation chemotherapy personalised targeted treatment immunotherapy Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC)

28 Targeted treatment of NSCLC
Expensive, but many biomarkers to select patient Personalised targeted treatment targets specific somatic mutations that cause NSCLC These mutations are patient-specific These mutations can be detected by molecular studies of : tumor (biopsy) blood (liquid biopsy)

29 Progress in lung ca treatment

30 Problems in targeted cancer treatment
The very high cost of personalised treatment makes companion diagnostics (cancer biomarkers) necessary The mutations leading to lung ca are the biomarkers to guide targeted therapy

31 Inheritance of cancer Majority of cancers are caused by genetic anomalies in the tumor (somatic mutations) Minority of cancers is inherited (germline mutations) : Breast Cancer : 10 % Colon cancer : % Prostate cancer : low Lung cancer : very low

32 Inheritance of lung cancer
NO germline mutations MANY somatic mutations

33 Driver and passenger gene mutations
TUMOR MUTATIONS EXPLANATION HNPCC 1782 Genomic instability Lung 150 Mutagen (smoke) Melanoma 80 Mutagen (sun) Colon with MSS 73 Breast 60 Prostate 40 Leukemia 10 Fast (acute) tumor Pediatric tumors Young age Vogelstein et al, Science Aug 22, 2013 NEJM May 30, 2015

34 Somatic mutations in cancer
P Breast NSCLC Colon Prostate TP53 23 34 48 16 KRAS < 10 15-25 35 5 PIK3CA 26 4 22 2 EGFR 10-30 MLL3 7 10 12 CTNNB1

35 Somatic mutations in adeno ca NSCLC
TP53 : 34 % EGFR : % KRAS : % MLL3 : 10 % STK11 : 9 % CDKN2A : 8 % ALK fusions : 5 % HER 2 : 2% BRAF : 1-2 % Ros fusions : 2 % PTEN : 25 % (loss) P

36 Somatic mutations in adeno ca NSCLC

37 Cell growth and survival pathway

38 Genetic testing for lung cancer
EGFR: deletions in exon 19 L858R mutation in exon 21 T790M mutation in exon 20 KRAS: mutations of codons 12 and 13 BRAF: V600E, G469A and D594G mutations ALK-EML4 fusion

39 EGFR Mutations in lung cancer
10 % (Europe) 30 % (Asia) women, non-smokers, adenocarcinoma (NSCLC) 90% of EGFR mutations : L858R in exon 21 (Sensitivity to TKIs) Small deletions in exon 19 (Sensitivity to TKIs) T790M in exon 20 (Resistance to TKIs) First-generation EGFR tyrosine-kinase inhibitors : Erlotinib (Tarceva) Gefitinib (Iressa) Second-generation EGFR tyrosine-kinase inhibitors : Dacomitinib Afatinib (Gilotrif) P

40 EGFR mutations

41 EGFR Resistance : T790M mutation
Inhibitors of EGFR with the T790M mutation : AZD9291 CO-1831

42 EGFR resistance : KRAS and BRAF mutations
TREATMENT RELAPSE EGFR KRAS WILD

43 KRAS Mutations in lung cancer
KRAS mutations : % in NSCLC smokers 90% of KRAS mutations : codon 12 (90 %) codon 13 (5-10 %) KRAS Mutations are contraindications for EGFR TKI

44 BRAF Mutations in lung cancer
BRAF mutations : 1-4 % in NSCLC 55 % of KRAS mutations : V600E BRAF Mutations are contraindications for EGFR TKI

45 ALK Mutations in lung cancer
ALK mutations : 5 % in NSCLC ALK activation is caused by EML4-ALK fusion generated by inv(2)(p21p23) ALK mutations are sensitive to ALK inhibitors : Crizotinib (Xalkori) Ceritinib (Zykadia)

46 ROS1 Mutations in lung cancer
ROS1 activation is caused by ROS1 fusion to different partners ROS1 mutations are sensitive to Crizotinib (Xalkori) P

47 Why perform genetic studies on tumor DNA ?
Initial diagnosis and prognosis Initial therapy Monitoring recurrence – metastasis Secundary therapy

48 Prognosis according to EGFR mutations

49 Prognosis according to BRAF mutations

50 Why perform genetic studies on tumor DNA ?
Initial diagnosis and prognosis Initial therapy Monitoring recurrence – metastasis Secundary therapy

51 Monitoring recurrence - metastasis
Clinical : imaging Tumor markers : CEA Circulating tumor cells (CTC) Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA)

52 Diagnostic tests on tumor DNA
Solid tumor biopsy FFPE Frozen Fresh Liquid biopsy : Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) Blood plasma/serum

53 Advantages liquid biopsies
No tissue biopsy needed No FFPE fixation Profiling the overall genotype of cancer primary cancer circulating cells metastases Better evaluation of : reaction to therapy development of resistance

54 Why liquid biopsies for Lung cancer ?
The main cause (20-30%) of cancer-related death High percentage of driver oncogenic mutations Druggable targets Lung biopsy difficult – liquid biopsy easy Relatively cheap test Association with expert group of Rafael Rosell

55 Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA)

56 ctDNA ctDNA from tumor tissue is released
through secretion, necrosis and apoptosis, but mainly through apoptosis

57 Ct DNA cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is released from healthy, inflamed or cancerous tissue undergoing apoptosis or necrosis a small fraction of cfDNA is circulating tumor (ctDNA) very sensitive technology is needed to detect mutations in ct DNA

58 cell-free DNA (cfDNA) Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) in plasma of healthy individuals : Mandel and Métais (1948) A proportion of cfDNA in pregnant women is fetus-derived (cffDNA) : Lo et al. (1997) Non-Invasive Prenatal testing (NIPT) for Down syndrome: 2012 : start 2015 : > 1 million tests   Market : 4 billion USD Increased concentrations of cfDNA in the circulation of cancer patients : Leon et al. (1977) A proportion of cfDNA is tumor-derived : Stroun et al. (1987) Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) testing (liquid biopsy) : 2015 : start   Market : 40 billion USD

59 Advantages of liquid biopsies vs FFPE
No biopsy needed Better representation of : Total mutation load Mutations in metastatic cells Reaction to therapy Development of resistance

60 Tissue biopsy TISSUE BIOPSY EGFR TREATMENT RELAPSE EGFR KRAS WILD

61 Liquid biopsy LIQUID BIOPSY TREATMENT EGFR KRAS BRAF WILD

62 Companies focusing on ctDNA
Pangaea Biotech Cynvenio BGI Agena Bioscience Boreal Genomics Chronix Biomedical Genomic Health Guardant Health Inivata Molecular MD Myriad Genetics Natera Personal Genome Diagnostics Sysmex Inostics Trovagene Liquid biopsy market for tumor biomarkers: 40 Billion USD per year

63 Companies focusing on ctDNA
Most companies have an expensive test (5000 USD) based upon NGS (Next Generation sequencing) detecting many mutations in many cancer genes of which the majority are currently “nondruggable”

64 Sensitivity to detect mutant sequence
Sanger sequencing : 10 % Next gen sequencing (NGS) : 1 % NGS + specific technology : 0.1 %

65 Pangaea biotech Simple, relatively cheap test for lung cancer
Spin off company from IOR (Instituto oncologico Rosell) CEO : Rafael Rosell Focusing on Lung cancer Technology : Mutant Allele - specific PCR using PNAs

66 Mutant Allele - specific PCR
PCR amplification of wild type allele is blocked by PNA probe, while mutant is allele is PCR-amplified

67 ctDNA testing for lung ca
1. DESCRIPTION : ct DNA testing on liquid biopsies : EGFR: deletions in exon 19, L858R mutation in exon 2, T790M mutation in exon 20 KRAS: codon 12 and 13 mutations BRAF: V600E, G469A and D594G mutations 2. SAMPLE : blood in specific test kits with Streck tubes provided by GENDIA 3. TURNAROUND TIME : 3 weeks 4. PRICE : < 1000 Euro

68 How offer ctDNA testing to your patients ?
Refer to our consultation : to ask for an appointment Send blood : to ask for tubes

69


Download ppt "DNA diagnosis of lung cancer"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google