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Jens Blobner, Laura Dengler, Sven Blobner, Constantin Eberle, Jonathan Weller, Nico Teske, Philipp Karschnia, Katharina Ruehlmann, Kathrin Heinrich, Frank Ziemann, Philipp Greif, Irmela Jeremias, Rachel Wuerstlein, Korbinian Hasselmann, Mario Dorostkar, Patrick Harter, Stefanie Quach, Veit Stoecklein, Nathalie Albert, Maximilian Niyazi, Joerg-Christian Tonn, Niklas Thon, Benedikt Westphalen, Louisa von Baumgarten, INNV-06. SIGNIFICANCE OF MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTICS FOR THERAPEUTIC DECISION-MAKING IN RECURRENT GLIOMA, Neuro-Oncology, Volume 25, Issue Supplement_5, November 2023, Page v157, https://doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noad179.0596
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Abstract
Targeted therapies have substantially improved survival in cancer patients with malignancies outside the brain. Whether in-depth analysis for molecular alterations may also offer therapeutic avenues in primary brain tumors remains unclear. We herein present our institutional experience for glioma patients discussed in our interdisciplinary Molecular Tumor Board (MTB) implemented at the Comprehensive Cancer Center Munich (LMU).
We retrospectively searched the database of the MTB for all recurrent glioma patients after previous therapy. Recommendations were based upon next-generation sequencing results of individual patient’s tumor tissue. Clinical and molecular information, previous therapy regimens and outcome parameters were collected.
Overall, 73 consecutive recurrent glioma patients were identified. In the median, advanced molecular testing was initiated with the third tumor recurrence. The median turnaround time between initiation of molecular profiling and MTB case discussion was 48 ± 75 days (range: 32 - 536 days). Targetable mutations were found for 50 recurrent glioma patients (68.5%). IDH1 mutation (27/73; 37%), EGFR amplification (19/73; 26%) and NF1 mutation (8/73; 11%) were the most detected alterations and a molecular-based treatment recommendation could be made for all of them. Therapeutic recommendations were implemented in 12 cases (24%) and one third of these heavily pretreated patients experienced clinical benefit with at least disease stabilization.
In-depth molecular analysis of tumor tissue may guide targeted therapy also in brain tumor patients and considerable anti-tumor effects might be observed in selected cases. However, future studies to corroborate our results are needed.
- mutation
- cancer
- cancer care facilities
- decision making
- glioma
- molecular diagnostic techniques
- epidermal growth factor receptors
- brain
- neoplasms
- primary brain tumors
- stabilization
- amplification
- idh1 gene
- molecular targeted therapy
- massively-parallel genome sequencing
- molecular profiling
- high-throughput nucleotide sequencing