Monitoring Daily Dynamics of Early Tumor Response to Targeted Therapy by Detecting Circulating Tumor DNA in Urine

2017 
Purpose: Non-invasive drug biomarkers for the early assessment of tumor response can enable adaptive therapeutic decision-making and proof-of-concept studies for investigational drugs. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is released into the circulation by tumor cell turnover and has been shown to be detectable in urine. Experimental Design : We tested the hypothesis that dynamic changes in epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR ) activating (exon 19del and L858R) and resistance (T790M) mutation levels detected in urine could inform tumor response within days of therapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients receiving osimertinib, a second line third generation anti-EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Results: Eight of nine evaluable NSCLC patients had detectable T790M-mutant DNA fragments in pre-treatment baseline samples. Daily monitoring of mutations in urine indicated a pattern of intermittent spikes throughout week 1 suggesting apoptosis with an overall decrease in fragment numbers between baselines to day 7 preceding radiographic response assessed at 6-12 weeks. Conclusions: These findings suggest drug-induced tumor apoptosis within days of initial dosing. Daily sampling of ctDNA may enable early assessment of patient response and proof-of-concept studies for drug development.
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