This single-institutional feasibility study prospectively characterized genomic alterations in recurrent or refractory solid tumors of pediatric patients to select a targeted therapy. Following treatment failure, patients with signed consent and ages above 6 months, underwent tumor biopsy or surgical resection of primary or metastatic tumor site. These newly acquired samples were analyzed by comparative genomic hybridization array, next-generation sequencing for 75 target genes, whole-exome and RNA sequencing. Biological significance of the alterations and suggestion of most relevant targeted therapies available were discussed in a multidisciplinary tumor board. From December 2012 to January 2016, 75 patients were included, 73 patients underwent 79 interventions, 56 of which were research biopsies with a low complication rate. All patients were pretreated, 37.0% had a brain tumor, and 63.0% had an extra-cranial solid tumor. Median tumor cell content was 70% (range, 0%-100%). Successful molecular analysis in 69 patients detected in 60.9% of patients an actionable alteration in various oncogenic pathways (42.4% with copy-number change, 33.3% with mutation, 2.1% with fusion), and change in diagnosis in three patients. Fourteen patients received 17 targeted therapies; two had received a matched treatment before inclusion. Research biopsies are feasible in advanced pediatric malignancies that exhibit a considerable amount of potentially actionable alterations. Genetic events affecting different cancer hallmarks and limited access to targeted agents within pediatric clinical trials remain the main obstacles that are addressed in our two subsequent precision medicine studies MAPPYACTS and AcSé-ESMART. .
MAPPYACTS (NCT02613962) is an international prospective precision medicine trial aiming to define tumor molecular profiles in pediatric patients with recurrent/refractory malignancies, in order to suggest the most adapted salvage treatment. From February 2016 to July 2020, 787 patients were included in France, Italy, Ireland and Spain. At least one genetic alteration leading to targeted treatment suggestion was identified in 436 patients (69%) with successful sequencing; 10% of these were considered "ready for routine use". Of 356 patients with follow-up beyond 12 months, 107 (30%) received one or more matched targeted therapies, 56% of them within early clinical trials, mainly in the AcSé-ESMART platform trial (NCT02813135). Overall, matched treatment resulted in a 17% objective response rate, those of patients with "ready for routine use" alterations was 38%. In patients with extra-cerebral tumors, 76% of actionable alterations detected in tumor tissue were also identified in circulating cell free DNA (cfDNA).
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