Professor Nick Turner

Group Leader: Molecular Oncology

OrcID: 0000-0001-8937-0873

Phone: +44 20 7153 5574

Email: [email protected]

Location: Chelsea

Professor Nick Turner

OrcID: 0000-0001-8937-0873

Phone: +44 20 7153 5574

Email: [email protected]

Location: Chelsea

Biography

Professor Nicholas Turner is a Consultant Medical Oncologist who specialises in the treatment of breast cancer. He read Natural Sciences at Cambridge University before qualifying in 1997 from the University of Oxford Medical School.

After completing general medical training in London, he trained in medical oncology at The Royal Free and University College Hospitals and completed a PhD at The Institute of Cancer Research in 2006. He joined the Breast Unit of The Royal Marsden as a Consultant in Medical Oncology in 2008. He was elected a fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2021.

He is the Director of The Royal Marsden and ICR NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, and Director of Clinical Research at The Royal Marsden and ICR. He is Head of the Ralph Lauren Centre for Breast Cancer Research and Group Leader in Molecular Oncology at the Breast Cancer Now Research Centre at the Institute of Cancer Research (ICR).

He has been awarded multiple prizes for his research including the AACR Outstanding Investigator Award for Breast Cancer Research in 2017, the AACR Team Science Award in 2022, the Pezcoller Foundation – EACR Translational Cancer Researcher Award in 2022, the ESMO award for Translational Research in 2023, and the Queen’s Anniversary Prize 2024.  

Professor Turner has co-chaired the ASCO/CAP and chaired the ESMO review committees on circulating tumour DNA analysis in patients with cancer. He sits on the organising committees of many international conferences on breast cancer, was the executive chair of the IMPAKT 2015 breast cancer conference, chair of the ESMO Breast Cancer 2025 conference, and is a scientific editor of the journal Cancer Discovery.

He is Chief Investigator of a number of national and international trials of precision therapy in breast cancer. His research interests include the development of new therapies for breast cancer and using liquid biopsies to deliver more precise treatment for breast cancer.

Professor Turner is a member of the Cancer Research UK Convergence Science Centre, which brings together leading researchers in engineering, physical sciences, life sciences and medicine to develop innovative ways to address challenges in cancer.

Convergence Science Centre

Qualifications

MA, University of Cambridge.

FRCP, Royal College of Physicians.

PhD, Institute of Cancer Research.

BM BCh, University of Oxford.

Awards, Prizes or Honours

AACR Outstanding Investigator for Breast Cancer Research, American Association for Cancer Research, 2017.

Best of the AACR Journals Collection, Cancer Research, American Association for Cancer Research, 2016.

Award for Advances in Breast Cancer, University of Padua, 2014.

Sir Patrick Forrest Prize, British Breast Group, 2015.

Editorial Boards

Breast Cancer Research, 2011.

Cancer Discovery.

External Committees

ESMO annual meeting Scientific organising committee, Member, ESMO, 2011.

San Antonio Breast Cancer Conference organising committee, Member, AACR, 2012.

IMPAKT Breast Cancer Conference Organising Committee, Member, ESMO, 2011.

Breast Cancer Clinical Studies Group, Member, NCRI, 2013.

Breast Cancer Research Grants Scientific Review Committee, Member, American Association for Cancer Research, 2014-2015.

AACR NextGen Grants for Transformative Cancer Research Committee, Member, American Association for Cancer Research, 2016-2017.

Breast Cancer Now Catalyst Grant Committee, Member, Breast Cancer Now, 2016-2017.

Breast Domain, Lead, Genomics England Clinical Interpretation Partnership.

Executive Committee, Member, Breast International Group - International Cooperative Group.

Types of Publications

Journal articles

Aarts, M. Sharpe, R. Garcia-Murillas, I. Gevensleben, H. Hurd, M.S. Shumway, S.D. Toniatti, C. Ashworth, A. Turner, N.C (2012) Forced mitotic entry of S-phase cells as a therapeutic strategy induced by inhibition of WEE1.. Show Abstract full text

Inhibition of the protein kinase WEE1 synergizes with chemotherapy in preclinical models and WEE1 inhibitors are being explored as potential cancer therapies. Here, we investigate the mechanism that underlies this synergy. We show that WEE1 inhibition forces S-phase-arrested cells directly into mitosis without completing DNA synthesis, resulting in highly abnormal mitoses characterized by dispersed chromosomes and disorganized bipolar spindles, ultimately resulting in mitotic exit with gross micronuclei formation and apoptosis. This mechanism of cell death is shared by CHK1 inhibitors, and combined WEE1 and CHK1 inhibition forces mitotic entry from S-phase in the absence of chemotherapy. We show that p53/p21 inactivation combined with high expression of mitotic cyclins and EZH2 predispose to mitotic entry during S-phase with cells reliant on WEE1 to prevent premature cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)1 activation. These features are characteristic of aggressive breast, and other, cancers for which WEE1 inhibitor combinations represent a promising targeted therapy.

Types of Publications

Journal articles

Iorns, E. Turner, N.C. Elliott, R. Syed, N. Garrone, O. Gasco, M. Tutt, A.N.J. Crook, T. Lord, C.J. Ashworth, A (2008) Identification of CDK10 as an important determinant of resistance to endocrine therapy for breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Therapies that target estrogen signaling have transformed the treatment of breast cancer. However, the effectiveness of these agents is limited by the development of resistance. Here, an RNAi screen was used to identify modifiers of tamoxifen sensitivity. We demonstrate that CDK10 is an important determinant of resistance to endocrine therapies and show that CDK10 silencing increases ETS2-driven transcription of c-RAF, resulting in MAPK pathway activation and loss of tumor cell reliance upon estrogen signaling. Patients with ER alpha-positive tumors that express low levels of CDK10 relapse early on tamoxifen, demonstrating the clinical significance of these observations. The association of low levels of CDK10 with methylation of the CDK10 promoter suggests a mechanism by which CDK10 expression is reduced in tumors.

Lord, C.J. McDonald, S. Swift, S. Turner, N.C. Ashworth, A (2008) A high-throughput RNA interference screen for DNA repair determinants of PARP inhibitor sensitivity.. Show Abstract full text

Synthetic lethality is an attractive strategy for the design of novel therapies for cancer. Using this approach we have previously demonstrated that inhibition of the DNA repair protein, PARP1, is synthetically lethal with deficiency of either of the breast cancer susceptibility proteins, BRCA1 and BRCA2. This observation is most likely explained by the inability of BRCA deficient cells to repair DNA damage by homologous recombination (HR) and has led to the clinical trials of potent PARP inhibitors for the treatment of BRCA mutation-associated cancer. To identify further determinants of PARP inhibitor response, we took a high-throughput genetic approach. We tested each of the genes recognised as having a role in DNA repair using short-interfering RNA (siRNA) and assessed the sensitivity of siRNA transfected cells to a potent PARP inhibitor, KU0058948. The validity of this approach was confirmed by the identification of known genetic determinants of PARP inhibitor sensitivity, including genes involved in HR. Novel determinants of PARP inhibitor response were also identified, including the transcription coupled DNA repair (TCR) proteins DDB1 and XAB2. These results suggest that DNA repair pathways other than HR may determine sensitivity to PARP inhibitors and highlight the likelihood that ostensibly distinct DNA repair pathways cooperate to maintain genomic stability and cellular viability. Furthermore, the identification of these novel determinants may eventually guide the optimal use of PARP inhibitors in the clinic.

Turner, N. Tutt, A. Ashworth, A (2004) Hallmarks of 'BRCAness' in sporadic cancers.. Show Abstract full text

Germline mutations in the BRCA1, BRCA2 and Fanconi anaemia genes confer cancer susceptibility, and the proteins encoded by these genes have distinct functions in related DNA-repair processes. Emerging evidence indicates that these processes are disrupted by numerous mechanisms in sporadic cancers. Collectively, there are properties that define 'BRCAness' - that is, traits that some sporadic cancers share with those occurring in either BRCA1- or BRCA2-mutation carriers. These common properties might have important implications for the clinical management of these cancers.

Turner, N. Tutt, A. Ashworth, A (2005) Targeting the DNA repair defect of BRCA tumours.. Show Abstract full text

Carriers of heterozygous mutations in BRCA1 or BRCA2 are strongly predisposed to breast and ovarian cancers. Cancers arising in these individuals have consistently lost the wild-type allele during tumour progression, and are therefore deficient in BRCA1 or BRCA2 function. Both BRCA1 and BRCA2 proteins have been implicated in the repair of double-strand DNA breaks by homologous recombination. This functional role in DNA repair could be exploited in the treatment of BRCA-deficient cancers by targeting the tumours with drugs that create DNA damage highly reliant on BRCA1 or BRCA2 for repair.

Iorns, E. Lord, C.J. Turner, N. Ashworth, A (2007) Utilizing RNA interference to enhance cancer drug discovery.. Show Abstract full text

With the development of RNA interference (RNAi) libraries, systematic and cost-effective genome-wide loss-of-function screens can now be carried out with the aim of assessing the role of specific genes in neoplastic phenotypes, and the rapid identification of novel drug targets. Here, we discuss the existing applications of RNAi in cancer drug discovery and highlight areas in this process that may benefit from this technology in the future.

Turner, N. Lambros, M.B. Horlings, H.M. Pearson, A. Sharpe, R. Natrajan, R. Geyer, F.C. van Kouwenhove, M. Kreike, B. Mackay, A. Ashworth, A. van de Vijver, M.J. Reis-Filho, J.S (2010) Integrative molecular profiling of triple negative breast cancers identifies amplicon drivers and potential therapeutic targets.. Show Abstract full text

Triple negative breast cancers (TNBCs) have a relatively poor prognosis and cannot be effectively treated with current targeted therapies. We searched for genes that have the potential to be therapeutic targets by identifying genes consistently overexpressed when amplified. Fifty-six TNBCs were subjected to high-resolution microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH), of which 24 were subjected to genome-wide gene expression analysis. TNBCs were genetically heterogeneous; no individual focal amplification was present at high frequency, although 78.6% of TNBCs harboured at least one focal amplification. Integration of aCGH and expression data revealed 40 genes significantly overexpressed when amplified, including the known oncogenes and potential therapeutic targets, FGFR2 (10q26.3), BUB3 (10q26.3), RAB20 (13q34), PKN1 (19p13.12) and NOTCH3 (19p13.12). We identified two TNBC cell lines with FGFR2 amplification, which both had constitutive activation of FGFR2. Amplified cell lines were highly sensitive to FGFR inhibitor PD173074, and to RNAi silencing of FGFR2. Treatment with PD173074 induced apoptosis resulting partly from inhibition of PI3K-AKT signalling. Independent validation using publicly available aCGH data sets revealed FGFR2 gene was amplified in 4% (6/165) of TNBC, but not in other subtypes (0/214, P=0.0065). Our analysis demonstrates that TNBCs are heterogeneous tumours with amplifications of FGFR2 in a subgroup of tumours.

Turner, N. Pearson, A. Sharpe, R. Lambros, M. Geyer, F. Lopez-Garcia, M.A. Natrajan, R. Marchio, C. Iorns, E. Mackay, A. Gillett, C. Grigoriadis, A. Tutt, A. Reis-Filho, J.S. Ashworth, A (2010) FGFR1 amplification drives endocrine therapy resistance and is a therapeutic target in breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Amplification of fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) occurs in approximately 10% of breast cancers and is associated with poor prognosis. However, it is uncertain whether overexpression of FGFR1 is causally linked to the poor prognosis of amplified cancers. Here, we show that FGFR1 overexpression is robustly associated with FGFR1 amplification in two independent series of breast cancers. Breast cancer cell lines with FGFR1 overexpression and amplification show enhanced ligand-dependent signaling, with increased activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase and phosphoinositide 3-kinase-AKT signaling pathways in response to FGF2, but also show basal ligand-independent signaling, and are dependent on FGFR signaling for anchorage-independent growth. FGFR1-amplified cell lines show resistance to 4-hydroxytamoxifen, which is reversed by small interfering RNA silencing of FGFR1, suggesting that FGFR1 overexpression also promotes endocrine therapy resistance. FGFR1 signaling suppresses progesterone receptor (PR) expression in vitro, and likewise, amplified cancers are frequently PR negative, identifying a potential biomarker for FGFR1 activity. Furthermore, we show that amplified cancers have a high proliferative rate assessed by Ki67 staining and that FGFR1 amplification is found in 16% to 27% of luminal B-type breast cancers. Our data suggest that amplification and overexpression of FGFR1 may be a major contributor to poor prognosis in luminal-type breast cancers, driving anchorage-independent proliferation and endocrine therapy resistance.

McCabe, N. Turner, N.C. Lord, C.J. Kluzek, K. Bialkowska, A. Swift, S. Giavara, S. O'Connor, M.J. Tutt, A.N. Zdzienicka, M.Z. Smith, G.C.M. Ashworth, A (2006) Deficiency in the repair of DNA damage by homologous recombination and sensitivity to poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibition.
Turner, N.C. Lord, C.J. Iorns, E. Brough, R. Swift, S. Elliott, R. Rayter, S. Tutt, A.N. Ashworth, A (2008) A synthetic lethal siRNA screen identifying genes mediating sensitivity to a PARP inhibitor.. Show Abstract full text

Inhibitors of poly (ADP-ribose)-polymerase-1 (PARP) are highly lethal to cells with deficiencies in BRCA1, BRCA2 or other components of the homologous recombination pathway. This has led to PARP inhibitors entering clinical trials as a potential therapy for cancer in carriers of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations. To discover new determinants of sensitivity to these drugs, we performed a PARP-inhibitor synthetic lethal short interfering RNA (siRNA) screen. We identified a number of kinases whose silencing strongly sensitised to PARP inhibitor, including cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (CDK5), MAPK12, PLK3, PNKP, STK22c and STK36. How CDK5 silencing mediates sensitivity was investigated. Previously, CDK5 has been suggested to be active only in a neuronal context, but here we show that CDK5 is required in non-neuronal cells for the DNA-damage response and, in particular, intra-S and G(2)/M cell-cycle checkpoints. These results highlight the potential of synthetic lethal siRNA screens with chemical inhibitors to define new determinants of sensitivity and potential therapeutic targets.

Reis-Filho, J.S. Simpson, P.T. Turner, N.C. Lambros, M.B. Jones, C. Mackay, A. Grigoriadis, A. Sarrio, D. Savage, K. Dexter, T. Iravani, M. Fenwick, K. Weber, B. Hardisson, D. Schmitt, F.C. Palacios, J. Lakhani, S.R. Ashworth, A (2006) FGFR1 emerges as a potential therapeutic target for lobular breast carcinomas.. Show Abstract full text

PURPOSE: Classic lobular carcinomas (CLC) account for 10% to 15% of all breast cancers. At the genetic level, CLCs show recurrent physical loss of chromosome16q coupled with the lack of E-cadherin (CDH1 gene) expression. However, little is known about the putative therapeutic targets for these tumors. The aim of this study was to characterize CLCs at the molecular genetic level and identify putative therapeutic targets. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We subjected 13 cases of CLC to a comprehensive molecular analysis including immunohistochemistry for E-cadherin, estrogen and progesterone receptors, HER2/neu and p53; high-resolution comparative genomic hybridization (HR-CGH); microarray-based CGH (aCGH); and fluorescent and chromogenic in situ hybridization for CCND1 and FGFR1. RESULTS: All cases lacked the expression of E-cadherin, p53, and HER2, and all but one case was positive for estrogen receptors. HR-CGH revealed recurrent gains on 1q and losses on 16q (both, 85%). aCGH showed a good agreement with but higher resolution and sensitivity than HR-CGH. Recurrent, high level gains at 11q13 (CCND1) and 8p12-p11.2 were identified in seven and six cases, respectively, and were validated with in situ hybridization. Examination of aCGH and the gene expression profile data of the cell lines, MDA-MB-134 and ZR-75-1, which harbor distinct gains of 8p12-p11.2, identified FGFR1 as a putative amplicon driver of 8p12-p11.2 amplification in MDA-MB-134. Inhibition of FGFR1 expression using small interfering RNA or a small-molecule chemical inhibitor showed that FGFR1 signaling contributes to the survival of MDA-MB-134 cells. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that receptor FGFR1 inhibitors may be useful as therapeutics in a subset of CLCs.

Turner, N.C. Reis-Filho, J.S. Russell, A.M. Springall, R.J. Ryder, K. Steele, D. Savage, K. Gillett, C.E. Schmitt, F.C. Ashworth, A. Tutt, A.N (2007) BRCA1 dysfunction in sporadic basal-like breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Basal-like breast cancers form a distinct subtype of breast cancer characterized by the expression of markers expressed in normal basal/myoepithelial cells. Breast cancers arising in carriers of germline BRCA1 mutations are predominately of basal-like type, suggesting that BRCA1 dysfunction may play a role in the pathogenesis of sporadic basal-like cancers. We analysed 37 sporadic breast cancers expressing the basal marker cytokeratin 5/6, and age- and grade-matched controls, for downregulation of BRCA1. Although BRCA1 promoter methylation was no more common in basal-like cancers (basal 14% vs controls 11%, P=0.72), BRCA1 messenger RNA expression was twofold lower in basal-like breast cancers compared to matched controls (P=0.008). ID4, a negative regulator of BRCA1, was expressed at 9.1-fold higher levels in basal-like breast cancer (P<0.0001), suggesting a potential mechanism of BRCA1 downregulation. BRCA1 downregulation correlated with the presence of multiple basal markers, revealing heterogeneity in the basal-like phenotype. Finally, we found that 63% of metaplastic breast cancers, a rare type of basal-like cancers, had BRCA1 methylation, in comparison to 12% of controls (P<0.0001). The high prevalence of BRCA1 dysfunction identified in this study could be exploited in the development of novel approaches to targeted treatment of basal-like breast cancer.

Turner, N.C. Reis-Filho, J.S (2006) Basal-like breast cancer and the BRCA1 phenotype.. Show Abstract full text

Breast cancers arising in germline carriers of BRCA1 mutations have a characteristic phenotype that has been shown in many studies to differentiate BRCA1 tumours from sporadic tumours. Recently, it has become clear that the characteristic phenotype of BRCA1 tumours is due to expression of the basal-like phenotype. We review these phenotypes, the evidence for BRCA1 pathway dysfunction in sporadic basal-like cancers, and discuss the clinical significance of the basal-like phenotype for cancer genetics and treatment.

Elbauomy Elsheikh, S. Green, A.R. Lambros, M.B.K. Turner, N.C. Grainge, M.J. Powe, D. Ellis, I.O. Reis-Filho, J.S (2007) FGFR1 amplification in breast carcinomas: a chromogenic in situ hybridisation analysis.. Show Abstract full text

BACKGROUND: The amplicon on 8p11.2 is reported to be found in up to 10% of breast carcinomas. It has been demonstrated recently that this amplicon has four separate cores. The second core encompasses important oncogene candidates, including the fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) gene. Recent studies have demonstrated that specific FGFR1 amplification correlates with gene expression and that FGFR1 activity is required for the survival of a FGFR1 amplified breast cancer cell line. METHODS: FGFR1 amplification was analysed in tissue microarrays comprising a cohort of 880 unselected breast tumours by means of chromogenic in situ hybridisation using inhouse-generated FGFR1-specific probes. Chromogenic in situ hybridisation signals were counted in a minimum 30 morphologically unequivocal neoplastic cells. Amplification was defined as >5 signals per nucleus in more than 50% of cancer cells or when large gene copy clusters were seen. RESULTS: FGFR1 amplification was observed in 8.7% of the tumours and was significantly more prevalent in patients >50 years of age and in tumours that lacked HER2 expression. No association was found with other histological parameters. Survival analysis revealed FGFR1 amplification as an independent prognostic factor for overall survival in the whole cohort. Subgroup analysis demonstrated that the independent prognostic impact of FGFR1 amplification was only seen in patients with oestrogen-receptor-positive tumours, where FGFR1 amplification was the strongest independent predictor of poor outcome. CONCLUSION: Given that up to 8.7% of all breast cancers harbour FGFR1 amplification and that this amplification is an independent predictor of overall survival, further studies analysing the FGFR1 as a potential therapeutic target for breast cancer patients are warranted.

Iorns, E. Lord, C.J. Grigoriadis, A. McDonald, S. Fenwick, K. Mackay, A. Mein, C.A. Natrajan, R. Savage, K. Tamber, N. Reis-Filho, J.S. Turner, N.C. Ashworth, A (2009) Integrated functional, gene expression and genomic analysis for the identification of cancer targets.. Show Abstract full text

The majority of new drug approvals for cancer are based on existing therapeutic targets. One approach to the identification of novel targets is to perform high-throughput RNA interference (RNAi) cellular viability screens. We describe a novel approach combining RNAi screening in multiple cell lines with gene expression and genomic profiling to identify novel cancer targets. We performed parallel RNAi screens in multiple cancer cell lines to identify genes that are essential for viability in some cell lines but not others, suggesting that these genes constitute key drivers of cellular survival in specific cancer cells. This approach was verified by the identification of PIK3CA, silencing of which was selectively lethal to the MCF7 cell line, which harbours an activating oncogenic PIK3CA mutation. We combined our functional RNAi approach with gene expression and genomic analysis, allowing the identification of several novel kinases, including WEE1, that are essential for viability only in cell lines that have an elevated level of expression of this kinase. Furthermore, we identified a subset of breast tumours that highly express WEE1 suggesting that WEE1 could be a novel therapeutic target in breast cancer. In conclusion, this strategy represents a novel and effective strategy for the identification of functionally important therapeutic targets in cancer.

Turner, N.C. Ashworth, A (2011) Biomarkers of PARP inhibitor sensitivity.. full text
Turner, N. Grose, R (2010) Fibroblast growth factor signalling: from development to cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) and their receptors control a wide range of biological functions, regulating cellular proliferation, survival, migration and differentiation. Although targeting FGF signalling as a cancer therapeutic target has lagged behind that of other receptor tyrosine kinases, there is now substantial evidence for the importance of FGF signalling in the pathogenesis of diverse tumour types, and clinical reagents that specifically target the FGFs or FGF receptors are being developed. Although FGF signalling can drive tumorigenesis, in different contexts FGF signalling can mediate tumour protective functions; the identification of the mechanisms that underlie these differential effects will be important to understand how FGF signalling can be most appropriately therapeutically targeted.

Sharpe, R. Pearson, A. Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Johnson, D. Mackay, A. Welti, J.C. Natrajan, R. Reynolds, A.R. Reis-Filho, J.S. Ashworth, A. Turner, N.C (2011) FGFR signaling promotes the growth of triple-negative and basal-like breast cancer cell lines both in vitro and in vivo.. Show Abstract full text

PURPOSE: The oncogenic drivers of triple-negative (TN) and basal-like breast cancers are largely unknown. Substantial evidence now links aberrant signaling by the fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFR) to the development of multiple cancer types. Here, we examined the role of FGFR signaling in TN breast cancer. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We examined the sensitivity of a panel of 31 breast cancer cell lines to the selective FGFR inhibitor PD173074 and investigated the potential mechanisms underlying sensitivity. RESULTS: TN breast cancer cell lines were more sensitive to PD173074 than comparator cell lines (P = 0.011), with 47% (7/15) of TN cell lines showing significantly reduced growth. The majority of TN cell lines showed only modest sensitivity to FGFR inhibition in two-dimensional growth but were highly sensitive in anchorage-independent conditions. PD173074 inhibited downstream mitogen-activated protein kinase and PI3K-AKT signaling and induced cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis. Basal-like breast cancer cell lines were found to express FGF2 ligand (11/21 positive) and, similarly, 62% of basal-like breast cancers expressed FGF2, as assessed by immunohistochemistry compared with 5% of nonbasal breast cancers (P < 0.0001). RNA interference targeting of FGF2 in basal-like cell lines significantly reduced growth in vitro and reduced down stream signaling, suggesting an autocrine FGF2 signaling loop. Treatment with PD173074 significantly reduced the growth of CAL51 basal-like breast cancer cell line xenografts in vivo. CONCLUSIONS: Basal-like breast cancer cell lines, and breast cancers, express autocrine FGF2 and show sensitivity to FGFR inhibitors, identifying a potential novel therapeutic approach for these cancers.

Graeser, M. McCarthy, A. Lord, C.J. Savage, K. Hills, M. Salter, J. Orr, N. Parton, M. Smith, I.E. Reis-Filho, J.S. Dowsett, M. Ashworth, A. Turner, N.C (2010) A marker of homologous recombination predicts pathologic complete response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in primary breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

PURPOSE: To assess the prevalence of defective homologous recombination (HR)-based DNA repair in sporadic primary breast cancers, examine the clincopathologic features that correlate with defective HR and the relationship with neoadjuvant chemotherapy response. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We examined a cohort of 68 patients with sporadic primary breast cancer who received neoadjuvant anthracylcine-based chemotherapy, with core biopsies taken 24 hours after the first cycle of chemotherapy. We assessed RAD51 focus formation, a marker of HR competence, by immunofluorescence in postchemotherapy biopsies along with geminin as a marker of proliferative cells. We assessed the RAD51 score as the proportion of proliferative cells with RAD51 foci. RESULTS: A low RAD51 score was present in 26% of cases (15/57, 95% CI: 15%-40%). Low RAD51 score correlated with high histologic grade (P = 0.031) and high baseline Ki67 (P = 0.005). Low RAD51 score was more frequent in triple-negative breast cancers than in ER- and/or HER2-positive breast cancer (67% vs. 19% respectively; P = 0.0036). Low RAD51 score was strongly predictive of pathologic complete response (pathCR) to chemotherapy, with 33% low RAD51 score cancers achieving pathCR compared with 3% of other cancers (P = 0.011). CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that defective HR, as indicated by low RAD51 score, may be one of the factors that underlie sensitivity to anthracycline-based chemotherapy. Defective HR is frequent in triple-negative breast cancer, but it is also present in a subset of other subtypes, identifying breast cancers that may benefit from therapies that target defective HR such as PARP inhibitors.

Turner, N.C. Jones, A.L (2008) Management of breast cancer--part I.. full text
Turner, N.C. Jones, A.L (2008) Management of breast cancer--Part II.. full text
Turner, N.C. Seckl, M.J (2010) A therapeutic target for smoking-associated lung cancer.. Show Abstract full text

A report in this issue of Science Translational Medicine reveals that amplification of the FGFR1 gene-which encodes fibroblast growth factor receptor 1-is a major oncogenic aberration in squamous cell lung cancer. This genetic variation may represent the first relatively high-frequency therapeutic target of smoking-associated lung cancer.

Brough, R. Frankum, J.R. Sims, D. Mackay, A. Mendes-Pereira, A.M. Bajrami, I. Costa-Cabral, S. Rafiq, R. Ahmad, A.S. Cerone, M.A. Natrajan, R. Sharpe, R. Shiu, K.-.K. Wetterskog, D. Dedes, K.J. Lambros, M.B. Rawjee, T. Linardopoulos, S. Reis-Filho, J.S. Turner, N.C. Lord, C.J. Ashworth, A (2011) Functional viability profiles of breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

UNLABELLED: The design of targeted therapeutic strategies for cancer has largely been driven by the identification of tumor-specific genetic changes. However, the large number of genetic alterations present in tumor cells means that it is difficult to discriminate between genes that are critical for maintaining the disease state and those that are merely coincidental. Even when critical genes can be identified, directly targeting these is often challenging, meaning that alternative strategies such as exploiting synthetic lethality may be beneficial. To address these issues, we have carried out a functional genetic screen in >30 commonly used models of breast cancer to identify genes critical to the growth of specific breast cancer subtypes. In particular, we describe potential new therapeutic targets for PTEN-mutated cancers and for estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers. We also show that large-scale functional profiling allows the classification of breast cancers into subgroups distinct from established subtypes. SIGNIFICANCE: Despite the wealth of molecular profiling data that describe breast tumors and breast tumor cell models, our understanding of the fundamental genetic dependencies in this disease is relatively poor. Using high-throughput RNA interference screening of a series of pharmacologically tractable genes, we have generated comprehensive functional viability profiles for a wide panel of commonly used breast tumor cell models. Analysis of these profiles identifies a series of novel genetic dependencies, including that of PTEN-null breast tumor cells upon mitotic checkpoint kinases, and provides a framework upon which additional dependencies and candidate therapeutic targets may be identified.

Barton, S. Zabaglo, L. A'Hern, R. Turner, N. Ferguson, T. O'Neill, S. Hills, M. Smith, I. Dowsett, M (2012) Assessment of the contribution of the IHC4+C score to decision making in clinical practice in early breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

BACKGROUND: The immunohistochemical (IHC) 4+C score is a cost-effective prognostic tool that uses clinicopathologic factors and four standard IHC assays: oestrogen receptor (ER), PR, HER2 and Ki67. We assessed its utility in personalising breast cancer treatment in a clinical practice setting, through comparison with Adjuvant! Online (AoL) and the Nottingham Prognostic Index (NPI). METHODS: We prospectively gathered clinicopathologic data for postmenopausal patients with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative, N0-3 resected early breast cancer treated consecutively at our institution. We retrospectively calculated and compared prognostic scores. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients reclassified from AoL-defined intermediate-risk by application of the IHC4+C score. RESULTS: The median age of the 101 patients included in the analysis was 63. In all, 15 of the 26 patients classified as intermediate-risk by AoL were reallocated to a low-risk group by application of the IHC4+C score and no patient was reclassified as high-risk group. Of the 59 patients classified as intermediate-risk group by the NPI, 24 were reallocated to a low-risk group and 13 to a high-risk group. CONCLUSION: IHC4+C reclassifies more than half of the patients stratified as being in intermediate-risk group by the AoL and NPI. The use of IHC4+C may substantially improve decision-making on adjuvant chemotherapy.

Aarts, M. Sharpe, R. Garcia-Murillas, I. Gevensleben, H. Hurd, M.S. Shumway, S.D. Toniatti, C. Ashworth, A. Turner, N.C (2012) Forced mitotic entry of S-phase cells as a therapeutic strategy induced by inhibition of WEE1.. Show Abstract full text

Inhibition of the protein kinase WEE1 synergizes with chemotherapy in preclinical models and WEE1 inhibitors are being explored as potential cancer therapies. Here, we investigate the mechanism that underlies this synergy. We show that WEE1 inhibition forces S-phase-arrested cells directly into mitosis without completing DNA synthesis, resulting in highly abnormal mitoses characterized by dispersed chromosomes and disorganized bipolar spindles, ultimately resulting in mitotic exit with gross micronuclei formation and apoptosis. This mechanism of cell death is shared by CHK1 inhibitors, and combined WEE1 and CHK1 inhibition forces mitotic entry from S-phase in the absence of chemotherapy. We show that p53/p21 inactivation combined with high expression of mitotic cyclins and EZH2 predispose to mitotic entry during S-phase with cells reliant on WEE1 to prevent premature cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)1 activation. These features are characteristic of aggressive breast, and other, cancers for which WEE1 inhibitor combinations represent a promising targeted therapy.

Aarts, M. Linardopoulos, S. Turner, N.C (2013) Tumour selective targeting of cell cycle kinases for cancer treatment.. Show Abstract full text

The deregulation of the cell cycle and checkpoint machinery in cancer presents a highly attractive therapeutic strategy. We review here the strategies used to exploit the dysregulated cell cycle, both through targeting kinases required for cell cycle progression, and checkpoint kinases to inappropriately force cells through the cell cycle. Appropriate control of the cell cycle is critical for proliferating normal cells, and we discuss the importance of defining tumour specific vulnerabilities that could be targeted with cell cycle kinase inhibitors. Recent studies have shown that ER-positive breast cancers rely on CDK4 to promote proliferation. TP53 mutant cancer cell lines are sensitive to WEE1 and CHK1 inhibitors in combination with chemotherapy, while PTEN-deficient aneuploid cancer cell lines are sensitive to TTK inhibitors.

Gevensleben, H. Garcia-Murillas, I. Graeser, M.K. Schiavon, G. Osin, P. Parton, M. Smith, I.E. Ashworth, A. Turner, N.C (2013) Noninvasive detection of HER2 amplification with plasma DNA digital PCR.. Show Abstract full text

PURPOSE: Digital PCR is a highly accurate method of determining DNA concentration. We adapted digital PCR to determine the presence of oncogenic amplification through noninvasive analysis of circulating free plasma DNA and exemplify this approach by developing a plasma DNA digital PCR assay for HER2 copy number. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: The reference gene for copy number assessment was assessed experimentally and bioinformatically. Chromosome 17 pericentromeric probes were shown to be suboptimal, and EFTUD2 at chromosome position 17q21.31 was selected for analysis. Digital PCR assay parameters were determined on plasma samples from a development cohort of 65 patients and assessed in an independent validation cohort of plasma samples from 58 patients with metastatic breast cancer. The sequential probability ratio test was used to assign the plasma DNA digital PCR test as being HER2-positive or -negative in the validation cohort. RESULTS: In the development cohort, the HER2:EFTUD2 plasma DNA copy number ratio had a receiver operator area under the curve (AUC) = 0.92 [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.86-0.99, P = 0.0003]. In the independent validation cohort, 64% (7 of 11) of patients with HER2-amplified cancers were classified as plasma digital PCR HER2-positive and 94% (44 of 47) of patients with HER2-nonamplified cancers were classified as digital PCR HER2-negative, with a positive and negative predictive value of 70% and 92%, respectively. CONCLUSION: Analysis of plasma DNA with digital PCR has the potential to screen for the acquisition of HER2 amplification in metastatic breast cancer. This approach could potentially be adapted to the analysis of any locus amplified in cancer.

Shiu, K.-.K. Wetterskog, D. Mackay, A. Natrajan, R. Lambros, M. Sims, D. Bajrami, I. Brough, R. Frankum, J. Sharpe, R. Marchio, C. Horlings, H. Reyal, F. van der Vijver, M. Turner, N. Reis-Filho, J.S. Lord, C.J. Ashworth, A (2014) Integrative molecular and functional profiling of ERBB2-amplified breast cancers identifies new genetic dependencies.. Show Abstract full text

Overexpression of the receptor tyrosine kinase ERBB2 (also known as HER2) occurs in around 15% of breast cancers and is driven by amplification of the ERBB2 gene. ERBB2 amplification is a marker of poor prognosis, and although anti-ERBB2-targeted therapies have shown significant clinical benefit, de novo and acquired resistance remains an important problem. Genomic profiling has demonstrated that ERBB2+ve breast cancers are distinguished from ER+ve and 'triple-negative' breast cancers by harbouring not only the ERBB2 amplification on 17q12, but also a number of co-amplified genes on 17q12 and amplification events on other chromosomes. Some of these genes may have important roles in influencing clinical outcome, and could represent genetic dependencies in ERBB2+ve cancers and therefore potential therapeutic targets. Here, we describe an integrated genomic, gene expression and functional analysis to determine whether the genes present within amplicons are critical for the survival of ERBB2+ve breast tumour cells. We show that only a fraction of the ERBB2-amplified breast tumour lines are truly addicted to the ERBB2 oncogene at the mRNA level and display a heterogeneous set of additional genetic dependencies. These include an addiction to the transcription factor gene TFAP2C when it is amplified and overexpressed, suggesting that TFAP2C represents a genetic dependency in some ERBB2+ve breast cancer cells.

Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Pearson, A. Campbell, J. Shnyder, S.D. Knowles, M.A. Ashworth, A. Turner, N.C (2013) Parallel RNA interference screens identify EGFR activation as an escape mechanism in FGFR3-mutant cancer.. Show Abstract full text

UNLABELLED: Activation of fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFR) is a common oncogenic event. Little is known about the determinants of sensitivity to FGFR inhibition and how these may vary between different oncogenic FGFRs. Using parallel RNA interference (RNAi) genetic screens, we show that the EGF receptor (EGFR) limits sensitivity to FGFR inhibition in FGFR3-mutant and -translocated cell lines, but not in other FGFR-driven cell lines. We also identify two distinct mechanisms through which EGFR limits sensitivity. In partially FGFR3-dependent lines, inhibition of FGFR3 results in transient downregulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling that is rescued by rapid upregulation of EGFR signaling. In cell lines that are intrinsically resistant to FGFR inhibition, EGFR dominates signaling via repression of FGFR3, with EGFR inhibition rescued by delayed upregulation of FGFR3 expression. Importantly, combinations of FGFR and EGFR inhibitors overcome these resistance mechanisms in vitro and in vivo. Our results illustrate the power of parallel RNAi screens in identifying common resistance mechanisms to targeted therapies. SIGNIFICANCE: Our data identify a novel therapeutic approach to the treatment of FGFR3-mutant cancer, emphasizing the potential of combination approaches targeting both FGFR3 and EGFR. Our data extend the role of EGFR in mediating resistance to inhibitors targeting a mutant oncogene, showing that EGFR signaling can repress mutant FGFR3 to induce intrinsic resistance to FGFR targeting.

Garcia-Murillas, I. Lambros, M. Turner, N.C (2013) Determination of HER2 amplification status on tumour DNA by digital PCR.. Show Abstract full text

Determination of the presence of HER2 amplification by quantitative PCR has been challenging, in part due to chromosomal instability and identification of a robust a reference region. We assessed the potential of digital PCR for highly accurate assessment of DNA concentration with EFTUD2 as chromosome 17 reference probe. We assessed a HER2:EFTDU2 ratio by digital PCR assay in the microdissected DNA from 18 HER2 amplified and 58 HER2 non-amplified cancers. The HER2:EFTUD2 ratio had high concordance with conventionally defined HER2 status with a sensitivity of 100% (18/18) and a specificity of 98% (57/58). The HER2:EFTUD2 digital PCR assay has potential to accurately assess HER2 amplification status.

Garcia-Murillas, I. Sharpe, R. Pearson, A. Campbell, J. Natrajan, R. Ashworth, A. Turner, N.C (2014) An siRNA screen identifies the GNAS locus as a driver in 20q amplified breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Poor-prognosis oestrogen receptor-positive breast cancer is characterised by the presence of high-level focal amplifications. We utilised a focused small interfering RNA screen in 14 breast cancer cell lines to define genes that were pathogenic in three genomic regions focally amplified in oestrogen receptor-positive breast cancer, 8p11-12, 11q13 and 20q. Silencing the GNAS locus, that encodes the G protein alpha stimulatory subunit Gαs, specifically reduced the growth of 20q amplified breast cancer cell lines. Examination of a publically available small hairpin RNA data set confirmed GNAS silencing to be selective for 20q amplified cancer cell lines. Cell lines with 20q amplification were found to overexpress specifically the extra long Gαs splice variant (XLαs). Overexpression of XLαs induced cAMP levels to a greater extent than Gαs, suggesting that amplification of the GNAS locus, and overexpression of the XLαs variant in particular, enhanced cAMP signalling. GNAS silencing in amplified cell lines reduced extracellular-signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) phosphorylation, and conversely overexpression of exogenous XLαs in a non-amplified cell line increased MEK-ERK1/2 phosphorylation, identifying one potential downstream consequence of enhanced cAMP signalling. Our data indicate that amplification of the GNAS locus may contribute to the pathogenesis of breast cancer, and highlight a previously unrecognised role for the GNAS XLαs variant in cancer.

Litchfield, K. Summersgill, B. Yost, S. Sultana, R. Labreche, K. Dudakia, D. Renwick, A. Seal, S. Al-Saadi, R. Broderick, P. Turner, N.C. Houlston, R.S. Huddart, R. Shipley, J. Turnbull, C (2015) Whole-exome sequencing reveals the mutational spectrum of testicular germ cell tumours.. Show Abstract full text

Testicular germ cell tumours (TGCTs) are the most common cancer in young men. Here we perform whole-exome sequencing (WES) of 42 TGCTs to comprehensively study the cancer's mutational profile. The mutation rate is uniformly low in all of the tumours (mean 0.5 mutations per Mb) as compared with common cancers, consistent with the embryological origin of TGCT. In addition to expected copy number gain of chromosome 12p and mutation of KIT, we identify recurrent mutations in the tumour suppressor gene CDC27 (11.9%). Copy number analysis reveals recurring amplification of the spermatocyte development gene FSIP2 (15.3%) and a 0.4 Mb region at Xq28 (15.3%). Two treatment-refractory patients are shown to harbour XRCC2 mutations, a gene strongly implicated in defining cisplatin resistance. Our findings provide further insights into genes involved in the development and progression of TGCT.

López-Knowles, E. Segal, C.V. Gao, Q. Garcia-Murillas, I. Turner, N.C. Smith, I. Martin, L.-.A. Dowsett, M (2014) Relationship of PIK3CA mutation and pathway activity with antiproliferative response to aromatase inhibition.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Introduction</h4>PIK3CA (phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase, catalytic subunit α) somatic mutations are the most common genetic alteration in breast cancer (BC). Their prognostic value and that of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) pathway in BC remains only partly defined. The effect of PIK3CA mutations and alterations of the PI3K pathway on the antiproliferative response to aromatase inhibitor treatment was determined.<h4>Methods</h4>The Sequenom MassARRAY System was used to determine the presence of 20 somatic mutations across the PIK3CA gene in 85 oestrogen receptor-positive (ER+) BC patients treated with 2 weeks of anastrozole before surgery. Whole-genome expression profiles were used to interrogate gene signatures (GSs) associated with the PI3K pathway. Antiproliferative activity was assessed by the change in Ki67 staining between baseline and surgery. Three GSs representing the PI3K pathway were assessed (PIK3CA-GS (Loi), PI3K-GS (Creighton) and PTEN-loss-GS (Saal)).<h4>Results</h4>In our study sample, 29% of tumours presented with either a hotspot (HS, 71%) or a nonhotspot (non-HS, 29%) PIK3CA mutation. Mutations were associated with markers of good prognosis such as progesterone receptor positivity (PgR+) (P=0.006), low grade (P=0.028) and luminal A subtype (P=0.039), with a trend towards significance with degree of ER positivity (P=0.051) and low levels of Ki67 (P=0.051). Non-HS mutations were associated with higher PgR (P=0.014) and ER (P<0.001) expression than both wild-type (WT) and HS-mutated samples, whereas neither biomarker differed significantly between WT and HS mutations or between HS and non-HS mutations. An inverse correlation was found between the Loi signature and both the Creighton and Saal signatures, and a positive correlation was found between the latter signatures. Lower pretreatment Ki67 levels were observed in mutation compared with WT samples (P=0.051), which was confirmed in an independent data set. Mutation status did not predict change in Ki67 in response to 2 weeks of anastrozole treatment; there was no significant difference between HS and non-HS mutations in this regard.<h4>Conclusions</h4>PIK3CA mutations are associated with classical markers of good prognosis and signatures of PI3K pathway activity. The presence of a PIK3CA mutation does not preclude a response to neoadjuvant anastrozole treatment.

Aarts, M. Bajrami, I. Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Elliott, R. Brough, R. Ashworth, A. Lord, C.J. Turner, N.C (2015) Functional Genetic Screen Identifies Increased Sensitivity to WEE1 Inhibition in Cells with Defects in Fanconi Anemia and HR Pathways.. Show Abstract full text

WEE1 kinase regulates CDK1 and CDK2 activity to facilitate DNA replication during S-phase and to prevent unscheduled entry into mitosis. WEE1 inhibitors synergize with DNA-damaging agents that arrest cells in S-phase by triggering direct mitotic entry without completing DNA synthesis, resulting in catastrophic chromosome fragmentation and apoptosis. Here, we investigated how WEE1 inhibition could be best exploited for cancer therapy by performing a functional genetic screen to identify novel determinants of sensitivity to WEE1 inhibition. Inhibition of kinases that regulate CDK activity, CHK1 and MYT1, synergized with WEE1 inhibition through both increased replication stress and forced mitotic entry of S-phase cells. Loss of multiple components of the Fanconi anemia (FA) and homologous recombination (HR) pathways, in particular DNA helicases, sensitized to WEE1 inhibition. Silencing of FA/HR genes resulted in excessive replication stress and nucleotide depletion following WEE1 inhibition, which ultimately led to increased unscheduled mitotic entry. Our results suggest that cancers with defects in FA and HR pathways may be targeted by WEE1 inhibition, providing a basis for a novel synthetic lethal strategy for cancers harboring FA/HR defects.

Frenel, J.S. Carreira, S. Goodall, J. Roda, D. Perez-Lopez, R. Tunariu, N. Riisnaes, R. Miranda, S. Figueiredo, I. Nava-Rodrigues, D. Smith, A. Leux, C. Garcia-Murillas, I. Ferraldeschi, R. Lorente, D. Mateo, J. Ong, M. Yap, T.A. Banerji, U. Gasi Tandefelt, D. Turner, N. Attard, G. de Bono, J.S (2015) Serial Next-Generation Sequencing of Circulating Cell-Free DNA Evaluating Tumor Clone Response To Molecularly Targeted Drug Administration.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>We evaluated whether next-generation sequencing (NGS) of circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) could be used for patient selection and as a tumor clone response biomarker in patients with advanced cancers participating in early-phase clinical trials of targeted drugs.<h4>Experimental design</h4>Plasma samples from patients with known tumor mutations who completed at least two courses of investigational targeted therapy were collected monthly, until disease progression. NGS was performed sequentially on the Ion Torrent PGM platform.<h4>Results</h4>cfDNA was extracted from 39 patients with various tumor types. Treatments administered targeted mainly the PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway (n = 28) or MEK (n = 7). Overall, 159 plasma samples were sequenced with a mean sequencing coverage achieved of 1,685X across experiments. At trial initiation (C1D1), 23 of 39 (59%) patients had at least one mutation identified in cfDNA (mean 2, range 1-5). Out of the 44 mutations identified at C1D1, TP53, PIK3CA and KRAS were the top 3 mutated genes identified, with 18 (41%), 9 (20%), 8 (18%) different mutations, respectively. Out of these 23 patients, 13 received a targeted drug matching their tumor profile. For the 23 patients with cfDNA mutation at C1D1, the monitoring of mutation allele frequency (AF) in consecutive plasma samples during treatment with targeted drugs demonstrated potential treatment associated clonal responses. Longitudinal monitoring of cfDNA samples with multiple mutations indicated the presence of separate clones behaving discordantly. Molecular changes at cfDNA mutation level were associated with time to disease progression by RECIST criteria.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Targeted NGS of cfDNA has potential clinical utility to monitor the delivery of targeted therapies.

Garcia-Murillas, I. Schiavon, G. Weigelt, B. Ng, C. Hrebien, S. Cutts, R.J. Cheang, M. Osin, P. Nerurkar, A. Kozarewa, I. Garrido, J.A. Dowsett, M. Reis-Filho, J.S. Smith, I.E. Turner, N.C (2015) Mutation tracking in circulating tumor DNA predicts relapse in early breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

The identification of early-stage breast cancer patients at high risk of relapse would allow tailoring of adjuvant therapy approaches. We assessed whether analysis of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in plasma can be used to monitor for minimal residual disease (MRD) in breast cancer. In a prospective cohort of 55 early breast cancer patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy, detection of ctDNA in plasma after completion of apparently curative treatment-either at a single postsurgical time point or with serial follow-up plasma samples-predicted metastatic relapse with high accuracy [hazard ratio, 25.1 (confidence interval, 4.08 to 130.5; log-rank P < 0.0001) or 12.0 (confidence interval, 3.36 to 43.07; log-rank P < 0.0001), respectively]. Mutation tracking in serial samples increased sensitivity for the prediction of relapse, with a median lead time of 7.9 months over clinical relapse. We further demonstrated that targeted capture sequencing analysis of ctDNA could define the genetic events of MRD, and that MRD sequencing predicted the genetic events of the subsequent metastatic relapse more accurately than sequencing of the primary cancer. Mutation tracking can therefore identify early breast cancer patients at high risk of relapse. Subsequent adjuvant therapeutic interventions could be tailored to the genetic events present in the MRD, a therapeutic approach that could in part combat the challenge posed by intratumor genetic heterogeneity.

Pender, A. Garcia-Murillas, I. Rana, S. Cutts, R.J. Kelly, G. Fenwick, K. Kozarewa, I. Gonzalez de Castro, D. Bhosle, J. O'Brien, M. Turner, N.C. Popat, S. Downward, J (2015) Efficient Genotyping of KRAS Mutant Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Using a Multiplexed Droplet Digital PCR Approach.. Show Abstract full text

Droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) can be used to detect low frequency mutations in oncogene-driven lung cancer. The range of KRAS point mutations observed in NSCLC necessitates a multiplex approach to efficient mutation detection in circulating DNA. Here we report the design and optimisation of three discriminatory ddPCR multiplex assays investigating nine different KRAS mutations using PrimePCR™ ddPCR™ Mutation Assays and the Bio-Rad QX100 system. Together these mutations account for 95% of the nucleotide changes found in KRAS in human cancer. Multiplex reactions were optimised on genomic DNA extracted from KRAS mutant cell lines and tested on DNA extracted from fixed tumour tissue from a cohort of lung cancer patients without prior knowledge of the specific KRAS genotype. The multiplex ddPCR assays had a limit of detection of better than 1 mutant KRAS molecule in 2,000 wild-type KRAS molecules, which compared favourably with a limit of detection of 1 in 50 for next generation sequencing and 1 in 10 for Sanger sequencing. Multiplex ddPCR assays thus provide a highly efficient methodology to identify KRAS mutations in lung adenocarcinoma.

Schiavon, G. Hrebien, S. Garcia-Murillas, I. Cutts, R.J. Pearson, A. Tarazona, N. Fenwick, K. Kozarewa, I. Lopez-Knowles, E. Ribas, R. Nerurkar, A. Osin, P. Chandarlapaty, S. Martin, L.-.A. Dowsett, M. Smith, I.E. Turner, N.C (2015) Analysis of ESR1 mutation in circulating tumor DNA demonstrates evolution during therapy for metastatic breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Acquired ESR1 mutations are a major mechanism of resistance to aromatase inhibitors (AIs). We developed ultra high-sensitivity multiplex digital polymerase chain reaction assays for ESR1 mutations in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) and investigated the clinical relevance and origin of ESR1 mutations in 171 women with advanced breast cancer. ESR1 mutation status in ctDNA showed high concordance with contemporaneous tumor biopsies and was accurately assessed in samples shipped at room temperature in preservative tubes. ESR1 mutations were found exclusively in estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer patients previously exposed to AI. Patients with ESR1 mutations had a substantially shorter progression-free survival on subsequent AI-based therapy [hazard ratio, 3.1; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.9 to 23.1; P = 0.0041]. ESR1 mutation prevalence differed markedly between patients who were first exposed to AI during the adjuvant and metastatic settings [5.8% (3 of 52) versus 36.4% (16 of 44), respectively; P = 0.0002]. In an independent cohort, ESR1 mutations were identified in 0% (0 of 32; 95% CI, 0 to 10.9) tumor biopsies taken after progression on adjuvant AI. In a patient with serial sampling, ESR1 mutation was selected during metastatic AI therapy to become the dominant clone in the cancer. ESR1 mutations can be robustly identified with ctDNA analysis and predict for resistance to subsequent AI therapy. ESR1 mutations are rarely acquired during adjuvant AI but are commonly selected by therapy for metastatic disease, providing evidence that mechanisms of resistance to targeted therapy may be substantially different between the treatment of micrometastatic and overt metastatic cancer.

Pender, A. Rana, S. Delgado, E.I. Proszek, P. Garcia-Murillas, I. Bhosle, J. O'Brien, M. Palma, J.F. Turner, N.C. Popat, S. Downward, J. Gonzalez, D (2016) EGFR mutant circulating tumour DNA detection in advanced lung adenocarcinoma: optimising the application of a ctDNA diagnostic to real world clinical practice. full text
Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Palafox, M. Asghar, U. Rivas, M.A. Cutts, R.J. Garcia-Murillas, I. Pearson, A. Guzman, M. Rodriguez, O. Grueso, J. Bellet, M. Cortés, J. Elliott, R. Pancholi, S. Baselga, J. Dowsett, M. Martin, L.-.A. Turner, N.C. Serra, V (2016) Early Adaptation and Acquired Resistance to CDK4/6 Inhibition in Estrogen Receptor-Positive Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Small-molecule inhibitors of the CDK4/6 cell-cycle kinases have shown clinical efficacy in estrogen receptor (ER)-positive metastatic breast cancer, although their cytostatic effects are limited by primary and acquired resistance. Here we report that ER-positive breast cancer cells can adapt quickly to CDK4/6 inhibition and evade cytostasis, in part, via noncanonical cyclin D1-CDK2-mediated S-phase entry. This adaptation was prevented by cotreatment with hormone therapies or PI3K inhibitors, which reduced the levels of cyclin D1 (CCND1) and other G1-S cyclins, abolished pRb phosphorylation, and inhibited activation of S-phase transcriptional programs. Combined targeting of both CDK4/6 and PI3K triggered cancer cell apoptosis in vitro and in patient-derived tumor xenograft (PDX) models, resulting in tumor regression and improved disease control. Furthermore, a triple combination of endocrine therapy, CDK4/6, and PI3K inhibition was more effective than paired combinations, provoking rapid tumor regressions in a PDX model. Mechanistic investigations showed that acquired resistance to CDK4/6 inhibition resulted from bypass of cyclin D1-CDK4/6 dependency through selection of CCNE1 amplification or RB1 loss. Notably, although PI3K inhibitors could prevent resistance to CDK4/6 inhibitors, they failed to resensitize cells once resistance had been acquired. However, we found that cells acquiring resistance to CDK4/6 inhibitors due to CCNE1 amplification could be resensitized by targeting CDK2. Overall, our results illustrate convergent mechanisms of early adaptation and acquired resistance to CDK4/6 inhibitors that enable alternate means of S-phase entry, highlighting strategies to prevent the acquisition of therapeutic resistance to these agents. Cancer Res; 76(8); 2301-13. ©2016 AACR.

Pearson, A. Smyth, E. Babina, I.S. Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Tarazona, N. Peckitt, C. Kilgour, E. Smith, N.R. Geh, C. Rooney, C. Cutts, R. Campbell, J. Ning, J. Fenwick, K. Swain, A. Brown, G. Chua, S. Thomas, A. Johnston, S.R.D. Ajaz, M. Sumpter, K. Gillbanks, A. Watkins, D. Chau, I. Popat, S. Cunningham, D. Turner, N.C (2016) High-Level Clonal FGFR Amplification and Response to FGFR Inhibition in a Translational Clinical Trial.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Unlabelled</h4>FGFR1 and FGFR2 are amplified in many tumor types, yet what determines response to FGFR inhibition in amplified cancers is unknown. In a translational clinical trial, we show that gastric cancers with high-level clonal FGFR2 amplification have a high response rate to the selective FGFR inhibitor AZD4547, whereas cancers with subclonal or low-level amplification did not respond. Using cell lines and patient-derived xenograft models, we show that high-level FGFR2 amplification initiates a distinct oncogene addiction phenotype, characterized by FGFR2-mediated transactivation of alternative receptor kinases, bringing PI3K/mTOR signaling under FGFR control. Signaling in low-level FGFR1-amplified cancers is more restricted to MAPK signaling, limiting sensitivity to FGFR inhibition. Finally, we show that circulating tumor DNA screening can identify high-level clonally amplified cancers. Our data provide a mechanistic understanding of the distinct pattern of oncogene addiction seen in highly amplified cancers and demonstrate the importance of clonality in predicting response to targeted therapy.<h4>Significance</h4>Robust single-agent response to FGFR inhibition is seen only in high-level FGFR-amplified cancers, with copy-number level dictating response to FGFR inhibition in vitro, in vivo, and in the clinic. High-level amplification of FGFR2 is relatively rare in gastric and breast cancers, and we show that screening for amplification in circulating tumor DNA may present a viable strategy to screen patients. Cancer Discov; 6(8); 838-51. ©2016 AACR.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 803.

Hrebien, S. O'Leary, B. Beaney, M. Schiavon, G. Fribbens, C. Bhambra, A. Johnson, R. Garcia-Murillas, I. Turner, N (2016) Reproducibility of Digital PCR Assays for Circulating Tumor DNA Analysis in Advanced Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis has the potential to allow non-invasive analysis of tumor mutations in advanced cancer. In this study we assessed the reproducibility of digital PCR (dPCR) assays of circulating tumor DNA in a cohort of patients with advanced breast cancer and assessed delayed plasma processing using cell free DNA preservative tubes. We recruited a cohort of 96 paired samples from 71 women with advanced breast cancer who had paired blood samples processed either immediately or delayed in preservative tubes with processing 48-72 hours after collection. Plasma DNA was analysed with multiplex digital PCR (mdPCR) assays for hotspot mutations in PIK3CA, ESR1 and ERBB2, and for AKT1 E17K. There was 94.8% (91/96) agreement in mutation calling between immediate and delayed processed tubes, kappa 0.88 95% CI 0.77-0.98). Discordance in mutation calling resulted from low allele frequency and likely stochastic effects. In concordant samples there was high correlation in mutant copies per ml plasma (r2 = 0.98; p<0.0001). There was elevation of total cell free plasma DNA concentrations in 10.3% of delayed processed tubes, although overall quantification of total cell free plasma DNA had similar prognostic effects in immediate (HR 3.6) and delayed (HR 3.0) tubes. There was moderate agreement in changes in allele fraction between sequential samples in quantitative mutation tracking (r = 0.84, p = 0.0002). Delayed processing of samples using preservative tubes allows for centralized ctDNA digital PCR mutation screening in advanced breast cancer. The potential of preservative tubes in quantitative mutation tracking requires further research.

Andre, F. Bachelot, T.D. Campone, M. Dalenc, F. Perez-Garcia, J.M. Hurvitz, S.A. Turner, N.C. Rugo, H.S. Baselga, J. Zhang, Y. Novartis Oncology Clinical Group, (2011) A multicenter, open-label phase II trial of dovitinib, a fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) inhibitor, in FGFR1-amplified and nonamplified metastatic breast cancer (BC).. Show Abstract full text

289 Background: Amplification of the FGFR1 gene occurs in ≈ 10% of BC, correlates with FGFR1 overexpression, and is mainly observed in estrogen receptor (ER)-positive human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)- BCs. Dovitinib (TKI258) is a multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor that demonstrated potent antitumor activities in FGFR1-amplified tumor cell lines. This phase 2 study evaluated the efficacy and safety of dovitinib in metastatic HER2- BC. METHODS: Patients were stratified into 4 groups based on FGFR1 and hormone receptor (HR) tumor subtype: 1) FGFR1+, HR+; 2) FGFR1+, HR-; 3) FGFR1-, HR+; 4) FGFR1-, HR-. Screening for FGFR1 status was performed by fluorescence/chromogenic in situ hybridization (cutoff ≥ 6 gene copies). Dovitinib (500 mg) was administered once daily on a 5-day-on/ 2-day-off schedule. The primary endpoint was RECIST best overall response rate in patients with measurable disease per external radiology review. RESULTS: Data from 77 of 81 treated patients were available as of January 2011 (n=21, n=34, n=22 in groups 1, 3, 4, respectively). Median number of prior therapies in the metastatic setting was 2 chemotherapy lines (all patients) and 2 endocrine therapy lines (HR+ patients). Liver metastases were present in 58% of patients (81%, 50%, 50% in groups 1, 3, 4, respectively). Most common adverse events included vomiting (75%; grade 3 [g3]: 6%), diarrhea (72%; g3: 6%), nausea (62%; g3: 5%), and asthenia (61%; g3: 17%). Median dovitinib exposure was 1.7 (range, 0-8.2) months, including 8 patients with > 4 months of therapy. Of patients with measurable disease at baseline, in group 1, 13% had unconfirmed partial responses and 44% had stable disease ≥ 4 months (SD4). In groups 3 and 4, 29% and 11% had SD4. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first trial reporting efficacy of an FGFR1 inhibitor in patients with FGFR1-amplified BC. Dovitinib showed antitumor activity in patients with HR+, FGFR1- amplified BC and disease stabilization in other subgroups. FGFR1 is likely a relevant target in BC, and FGFR1 amplification may define a segment of dovitinib-sensitive disease. Further evaluation of dovitinib in patients with HR+ BC is planned.

Andre, F. Bachelot, T.D. Campone, M. Dalenc, F. Perez-Garcia, J.M. Hurvitz, S.A. Turner, N.C. Rugo, H.S. Shi, M.M. Zhang, Y. Kay, A.C. Yovine, A.J. Baselga, J (2011) A multicenter, open-label phase II trial of dovitinib, an FGFR1 inhibitor, in FGFR1 amplified and non-amplified metastatic breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

508 Background: Amplification of the FGFR1 gene occurs in ≈ 10% of breast cancers (BC), correlates with FGFR1 overexpression, and is mainly observed in ER+/Her2- BCs. Preclinical (pc) studies suggest that FGFR1 is a candidate therapeutic target in BC. Dovitinib (TKI258) is a tyrosine kinase inhibitor that targets FGFR, VEGFR, and PDGFR. In pc models, dovitinib demonstrated potent antitumor activities in FGFR1-amplified tumor cell lines. METHODS: A 2-stage, phase 2 study to determine the efficacy and safety of dovitinib in 4 groups (gps) of metastatic BC patients (pts): (gp 1: FGFR1+, HR+), (gp 2: FGFR1+, HR-) (gp 3: FGFR1-, HR+), (gp 4: FGFR1-, HR-). Pt selection was performed according to FISH/CISH for FGFR1 (cut-off ≥ 6 gene copies). Dovitinib (500 mg) was administered once daily on a 5-day on/ 2-day off schedule. The primary endpoint was RECIST best overall response rate in pts with measurable disease per external radiology review. RESULTS: As of January 2011, 81 pts were treated, with data for 77 pts available (gp 1 = 21, gp 3 = 34, gp 4 = 22). Prior therapy in the metastatic setting: a median of 2 chemotherapy lines (all pts) and 2 endocrine therapy lines (HR+ pts). 58% of pts had liver metastases (gp1: 81%; gps 3,4: 50%). Most common adverse events included: vomiting (75%; grade 3 [g3]: 6%), diarrhea (72%; g3: 6%), nausea (62%; g3: 5%), and asthenia (61%; g3: 17%). Median exposure was 1.7 (range, 0-8.2) months (mos), including 8 pts who received > 4 mos of therapy. For pts with measurable disease at baseline: gp 1, 2 (13%) had unconfirmed partial responses, and 7 (44%) pts had stable disease ≥ 4 mos (SD4); gps 3 and 4, SD4 was respectively noted in 8 (29%) and 2 (11%) pts. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first trial reporting efficacy of an FGFR1 inhibitor in pts with FGFR1-amplified BCs. Dovitinib showed antitumor activity in this heavily pretreated BC population with extensive visceral involvement. Activity was observed in HR+ pts with FGFR1-amplified disease with disease stabilization observed in other subgroups. FGFR1 is likely a relevant target in BC and FGFR1 amplification may define a molecular segment of dovitinib-sensitive disease. Further evaluation of dovitinib in pts with HR+ BC is planned.

Loibl, S. Turner, N.C. Ro, J. Cristofanilli, M. Iwata, H. Im, S.-.A. Masuda, N. Loi, S. André, F. Harbeck, N. Verma, S. Folkerd, E. Puyana Theall, K. Hoffman, J. Zhang, K. Bartlett, C.H. Dowsett, M (2017) Palbociclib Combined with Fulvestrant in Premenopausal Women with Advanced Breast Cancer and Prior Progression on Endocrine Therapy: PALOMA-3 Results.. Show Abstract full text

BACKGROUND: The efficacy and safety of palbociclib, a cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 inhibitor, combined with fulvestrant and goserelin was assessed in premenopausal women with advanced breast cancer (ABC) who had progressed on prior endocrine therapy (ET). PATIENTS AND METHODS: One hundred eight premenopausal endocrine-refractory women ≥18 years with hormone receptor-positive (HR+)/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HER2-) ABC were among 521 women randomized 2:1 (347:174) to fulvestrant (500 mg) ± goserelin with either palbociclib (125 mg/day orally, 3 weeks on, 1 week off) or placebo. This analysis assessed whether the overall tolerable safety profile and significant progression-free survival (PFS) improvement extended to premenopausal women. Potential drug-drug interactions (DDIs) and ovarian suppression with goserelin were assessed via plasma pharmacokinetics and biochemical analyses, respectively. (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01942135) RESULTS: Median PFS for premenopausal women in the palbociclib (n = 72) versus placebo arm (n = 36) was 9.5 versus 5.6 months, respectively (hazard ratio, 0.50, 95% confidence interval: 0.29-0.87), and consistent with the significant PFS improvement in the same arms for postmenopausal women. Any-grade and grade ≤3 neutropenia, leukopenia, and infections were among the most frequent adverse events reported in the palbociclib arm with concurrent goserelin administration. Hormone concentrations were similar between treatment arms and confirmed sustained ovarian suppression. Clinically relevant DDIs were not observed. CONCLUSION: Palbociclib combined with fulvestrant and goserelin was an effective and well-tolerated treatment for premenopausal women with prior endocrine-resistant HR+/HER2- ABC. Inclusion of both premenopausal and postmenopausal women in pivotal combination ET trials facilitates access to novel drugs for young women and should be considered as a new standard for clinical trial design. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: PALOMA-3, the first registrational study to include premenopausal women in a trial investigating a CDK4/6 inhibitor combined with endocrine therapy, has the largest premenopausal cohort reported in an endocrine-resistant setting. In pretreated premenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive advanced breast cancer, palbociclib plus fulvestrant and goserelin (luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone [LHRH] agonist) treatment almost doubled median progression-free survival (PFS) and significantly increased the objective response rate versus endocrine monotherapy, achieving results comparable to those reported for chemotherapy without apparently interfering with LHRH agonist-induced ovarian suppression. The significant PFS gain and tolerable safety profile strongly support use of this regimen in premenopausal women with endocrine-resistant disease who could possibly delay chemotherapy.

Dréan, A. Williamson, C.T. Brough, R. Brandsma, I. Menon, M. Konde, A. Garcia-Murillas, I. Pemberton, H.N. Frankum, J. Rafiq, R. Badham, N. Campbell, J. Gulati, A. Turner, N.C. Pettitt, S.J. Ashworth, A. Lord, C.J (2017) Modeling Therapy Resistance in <i>BRCA1/2</i>-Mutant Cancers.. Show Abstract full text

Although PARP inhibitors target <i>BRCA1</i>- or <i>BRCA2</i>-mutant tumor cells, drug resistance is a problem. PARP inhibitor resistance is sometimes associated with the presence of secondary or "revertant" mutations in <i>BRCA1</i> or <i>BRCA2</i> Whether secondary mutant tumor cells are selected for in a Darwinian fashion by treatment is unclear. Furthermore, how PARP inhibitor resistance might be therapeutically targeted is also poorly understood. Using CRISPR mutagenesis, we generated isogenic tumor cell models with secondary <i>BRCA1</i> or <i>BRCA2</i> mutations. Using these in heterogeneous <i>in vitro</i> culture or <i>in vivo</i> xenograft experiments in which the clonal composition of tumor cell populations in response to therapy was monitored, we established that PARP inhibitor or platinum salt exposure selects for secondary mutant clones in a Darwinian fashion, with the periodicity of PARP inhibitor administration and the pretreatment frequency of secondary mutant tumor cells influencing the eventual clonal composition of the tumor cell population. In xenograft studies, the presence of secondary mutant cells in tumors impaired the therapeutic effect of a clinical PARP inhibitor. However, we found that both PARP inhibitor-sensitive and PARP inhibitor-resistant <i>BRCA2</i> mutant tumor cells were sensitive to AZD-1775, a WEE1 kinase inhibitor. In mice carrying heterogeneous tumors, AZD-1775 delivered a greater therapeutic benefit than olaparib treatment. This suggests that despite the restoration of some <i>BRCA1</i> or <i>BRCA2</i> gene function in "revertant" tumor cells, vulnerabilities still exist that could be therapeutically exploited. <i>Mol Cancer Ther; 16(9); 2022-34. ©2017 AACR</i>.

Asghar, U.S. Barr, A.R. Cutts, R. Beaney, M. Babina, I. Sampath, D. Giltnane, J. Lacap, J.A. Crocker, L. Young, A. Pearson, A. Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Bakal, C. Turner, N.C (2017) Single-Cell Dynamics Determines Response to CDK4/6 Inhibition in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<b>Purpose:</b> Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a heterogeneous subgroup of breast cancer that is associated with a poor prognosis. We evaluated the activity of CDK4/6 inhibitors across the TNBC subtypes and investigated mechanisms of sensitivity.<b>Experimental Design:</b> A panel of cell lines representative of TNBC was tested for <i>in vitro</i> and <i>in vivo</i> sensitivity to CDK4/6 inhibition. A fluorescent CDK2 activity reporter was used for single-cell analysis in conjunction with time-lapse imaging.<b>Results:</b> The luminal androgen receptor (LAR) subtype of TNBC was highly sensitive to CDK4/6 inhibition both <i>in vitro</i> (<i>P</i> < 0.001 LAR vs. basal-like) and <i>in vivo</i> in MDA-MB-453 LAR cell line xenografts. Single-cell analysis of CDK2 activity demonstrated differences in cell-cycle dynamics between LAR and basal-like cells. Palbociclib-sensitive LAR cells exit mitosis with low levels of CDK2 activity, into a quiescent state that requires CDK4/6 activity for cell-cycle reentry. Palbociclib-resistant basal-like cells exit mitosis directly into a proliferative state, with high levels of CDK2 activity, bypassing the restriction point and the requirement for CDK4/6 activity. High CDK2 activity after mitosis is driven by temporal deregulation of cyclin E1 expression. CDK4/6 inhibitors were synergistic with PI3 kinase inhibitors in <i>PIK3CA</i>-mutant TNBC cell lines, extending CDK4/6 inhibitor sensitivity to additional TNBC subtypes.<b>Conclusions:</b> Cell-cycle dynamics determine the response to CDK4/6 inhibition in TNBC. CDK4/6 inhibitors, alone and in combination, are a novel therapeutic strategy for specific subgroups of TNBC. <i>Clin Cancer Res; 23(18); 5561-72. ©2017 AACR</i>.

Lee, J.Y. Garcia-Murillas, I. Cutts, R.J. De Castro, D.G. Grove, L. Hurley, T. Wang, F. Nutting, C. Newbold, K. Harrington, K. Turner, N. Bhide, S (2017) Predicting response to radical (chemo)radiotherapy with circulating HPV DNA in locally advanced head and neck squamous carcinoma.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Following chemo-radiotherapy (CCRT) for human papilloma virus positive (HPV+) locally advanced head and neck cancer, patients frequently undergo unnecessary neck dissection (ND) and/or repeated biopsies for abnormal PET-CT, which causes significant morbidity. We assessed the role of circulating HPV DNA in identifying 'true' residual disease.<h4>Methods</h4>We prospectively recruited test (n=55) and validation (n=33) cohorts. HPV status was confirmed by E7 RT-PCR. We developed a novel amplicon-based next generation sequencing assay (HPV16-detect) to detect circulating HPV DNA. Circulating HPV DNA levels post-CCRT were correlated to disease response (PET-CT).<h4>Results</h4>In pre-CCRT plasma, HPV-detect demonstrated 100% sensitivity and 93% specificity, and 90% sensitivity and 100% specificity for the test (27 HPV+) and validation (20 HPV+) cohorts, respectively. Thirty-six out of 37 patients (test and validation cohort) with complete samples-set had negative HPV-detect at end of treatment. Six patients underwent ND (3) and repeat primary site biopsies (3) for positive PET-CT but had no viable tumour. One patient had positive HPV-detect and positive PET-CT and liver biopsy, indicating 100% agreement for HPV-detect and residual cancer.<h4>Conclusions</h4>We demonstrate that HPV16-detect is a highly sensitive and specific test for identification of HPV DNA in plasma at diagnosis. HPV DNA post-treatment correlates with clinical response.

Okines, A. Irfan, T. Khabra, K. Smith, I. O'Brien, M. Parton, M. Noble, J. Stanway, S. Somaiah, N. Ring, A. Johnston, S. Turner, N (2018) Development and responses of brain metastases during treatment with trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) for HER2 positive advanced breast cancer: A single institution experience.. Show Abstract full text

Ado-trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) is an antibody-drug conjugate that does not cross an intact blood-brain barrier. In the EMILIA trial of T-DM1 vs capecitabine/lapatinib for HER2 positive advanced breast cancer, all patients had baseline brain imaging, and 9/450 (2%) of patients with negative baseline imaging developed new brain disease during T-DM1. We assessed the frequency of brain progression in clinical practice, without routine baseline imaging. We undertook a retrospective study of all patients treated with T-DM1 at the Royal Marsden Hospital from 2011 to 2016. Data collected included baseline characteristics, previous treatment for advanced breast cancer, sites of metastatic disease, duration of T-DM1, sites of progression, and treatment of CNS progression. Fifty-five patients were identified who had received a median of two prior lines of treatment (range 0-5). All were HER2 positive; 45 patients had IHC 3+ tumors and 10 were ISH positive. Patients received a median of 12 cycles of T-DM1 (range 1-34), and six remain on treatment at the time of analysis. Before commencing T-DM1, 16/55 (29%) had known brain metastases (treated with whole brain [9] stereotactic radiotherapy [6] or both [1]). Brain was the first site of progression in 56% (9/16) patients, with a median time to brain progression of 9.9 months (95% CI 3.9-12.2). In patients without known baseline brain metastases, 17.9% (7/39) developed new symptomatic brain disease during T-DM1, after a median of 7.5 months (95%CI 3.8-9.6). Brain progression was isolated, with control of extra-cranial disease in 4/7 patients. Only one patient was suitable for stereotactic radiotherapy. Median time to extra-cranial progression in all patients was 11.5 months (95% CI 9.1-17.7), and median OS in all patients was 17.8 months (95% CI 14.2-22). In patients not screened for brain metastases at baseline, the brain was the first site of progression in a significant proportion. Baseline brain imaging may have a role in standard practice for patients commencing T-DM1 therapy.

Dodson, A. Okonji, D. Assersohn, L. Rigg, A. Sheri, A. Turner, N. Smith, I. Parton, M. Dowsett, M (2018) Discordance between oncotype DX recurrence score and RSPC for predicting residual risk of recurrence in ER-positive breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Oncotype DX, a gene expression assay widely employed to aid decision making on adjuvant chemotherapy use in patients with primary oestrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer, produces a recurrence score (RS) related to distant disease recurrence (DR) risk (RS%). In node-negative patients, RS can be integrated with clinicopathological parameters to derive RS-pathology-clinical (RSPC) that improves prognostic accuracy.<h4>Methods</h4>Data were collected on patients having clinically indicated tests with an intermediate clinical risk of distant recurrence, and for whom the decision to prescribe chemotherapy remained unclear. Correlation between RS% and RSPC scores was examined. An agreement table was constructed using risk-categorised data. Association between RS%-derived categorical risk assignments and treatment recommendation was evaluated.<h4>Results</h4>Data on 171 tests (168 patients) were available. Median DR risk by RS% was 11% (range 3-34%), by RSPC it was 15% (range 4-63%). Correlation between RS% and RSPC was 0.702 (p < 0.001). RS% classified 57.3% of cases as low-, 32.2% intermediate- and 10.5% high-risk for DR; by RSPC proportions were 33.9, 35.7, and 30.4%, respectively. The number of patients receiving chemotherapy recommendations was: 14/87 (16.1%) categorised as low-risk by RS%, 27/49 (55.1%) as intermediate-risk and 12/13 (92.3%) as high-risk. Of 149 patients recommended for endocrine treatment alone, 28 (18.8%) were categorised by RS% as low-risk but by RSPC as intermediate- or high-risk.<h4>Conclusions</h4>In this group of patients, RSPC assessed fewer patients as low-risk and more as high-risk than did RS%. The discordances between the scores indicate that RSPC estimates of risk should be considered when selecting patients for endocrine therapy alone.

Kingston, B. Kayhanian, H. Brooks, C. Cox, N. Chaabouni, N. Redana, S. Kalaitzaki, E. Smith, I. O'Brien, M. Johnston, S. Parton, M. Noble, J. Stanway, S. Ring, A. Turner, N. Okines, A (2017) Treatment and prognosis of leptomeningeal disease secondary to metastatic breast cancer: A single-centre experience.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Leptomeningeal disease (LMD) is an uncommon complication of advanced breast cancer. The prognosis is poor, and although radiotherapy (RT), systemic and intra-thecal (IT) chemotherapy are accepted treatment modalities, efficacy data are limited. This study was designed to evaluate potential predictors of survival in this patient group.<h4>Methods</h4>Breast cancer patients with LMD diagnosed by MRI in a 10-year period (2004-2014) were identified from electronic patient records. PFS and OS estimates were calculated using Kaplan-Meier method, with planned sub-group analysis by treatment modality. Cox regression was employed to identify significant prognostic variables.<h4>Results</h4>We identified 182 eligible patients; all female, median age at LMD diagnosis 52.5 years (range 23-80). Ninety patients (49.5%) were ER positive/HER2 negative; 48 (26.4%) were HER2 positive, and 27 (14.8%) were triple negative. HER2 status was unknown in 17 (9.3%). Initial management of LMD was most commonly whole or partial brain RT in 62 (34.1%), systemic therapy in 45 (24.7%) or supportive care alone in 37 (20.3%). Fourteen patients (7.7%) underwent IT chemotherapy, of whom two also received IT trastuzumab. From diagnosis of LMD, the median PFS was 3.9 months (95%CI 3.2-5.0) and median OS was 5.4 months (95%CI 4.2-6.6). Patients treated with systemic therapy had the longest OS (median 8.8 months, 95%CI 5.5-11.1), compared to RT; 6.1 months (95%CI 4.2-7.9 months), IT therapy; 2.9 months (95%CI 1.2-5.8) and supportive care; 1.7 months (95%CI 0.9-3.0). On multivariable analysis, triple negative histology, concomitant brain metastases, and LMD involving both the brain and spinal cord were associated with poor OS.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Breast cancer patients with triple negative LMD, concomitant brain metastases or LMD affecting both the spine and brain have the poorest prognosis. Clinical trials to identify more effective treatments for these patients are urgently needed.

Fribbens, C. Garcia Murillas, I. Beaney, M. Hrebien, S. O'Leary, B. Kilburn, L. Howarth, K. Epstein, M. Green, E. Rosenfeld, N. Ring, A. Johnston, S. Turner, N (2017) Tracking evolution of aromatase inhibitor resistance with circulating tumour DNA analysis in metastatic breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Background: Selection of resistance mutations may play a major role in the development of endocrine resistance. ESR1 mutations are rare in primary breast cancer but have high prevalence in patients treated with aromatase inhibitors (AI) for advanced breast cancer. We investigated the evolution of genetic resistance to first line AI therapy using sequential ctDNA sampling in patients with advanced breast cancer. Patients and Methods: 83 patients on first line AI therapy for metastatic breast cancer were enrolled in a prospective study. Plasma samples were collected every 3 months to disease progression and ctDNA analysed by digital droplet PCR and enhanced tagged-amplicon sequencing (eTAm-Seq). Mutations identified in progression samples by sequencing were tracked back through samples prior to progression to study the evolution of mutations on therapy. The frequency of novel mutations were validated in an independent cohort of available baseline plasma samples in the SoFEA trial, which enrolled patients with prior sensitivity to AI. Results: Of the 39 patients who progressed on first line AI, 56.4%(22/39) had ESR1 mutations detectable at progression, which were polyclonal in 40.9%(9/22) patients. In serial tracking, ESR1 mutations were detectable median 6.7 months (95%CI 3.7-NA) prior to clinical progression. Utilising eTAm-Seq ctDNA sequencing of progression plasma, ESR1 mutations were demonstrated to be sub-clonal in 72.2%(13/18) patients. Mutations in RAS genes were identified in 15.4%(6/39) of progressing patients (4 KRAS, 1 HRAS, 1 NRAS). In SoFEA, KRAS mutations were detected in 21.2%(24/113) patients, although there was no evidence that KRAS mutation status was prognostic for progression free or overall survival. Conclusions: Cancers progressing on first line AI show high levels of genetic heterogeneity, with frequent sub-clonal mutations. Sub-clonal KRAS mutations are found at high frequency. The genetic diversity of AI resistant cancers may limit subsequent targeted therapy approaches.

Weigelt, B. Comino-Méndez, I. de Bruijn, I. Tian, L. Meisel, J.L. García-Murillas, I. Fribbens, C. Cutts, R. Martelotto, L.G. Ng, C.K.Y. Lim, R.S. Selenica, P. Piscuoglio, S. Aghajanian, C. Norton, L. Murali, R. Hyman, D.M. Borsu, L. Arcila, M.E. Konner, J. Reis-Filho, J.S. Greenberg, R.A. Robson, M.E. Turner, N.C (2017) Diverse BRCA1 and BRCA2 Reversion Mutations in Circulating Cell-Free DNA of Therapy-Resistant Breast or Ovarian Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Purpose: Resistance to platinum-based chemotherapy or PARP inhibition in germline BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation carriers may occur through somatic reversion mutations or intragenic deletions that restore BRCA1 or BRCA2 function. We assessed whether BRCA1/2 reversion mutations could be identified in circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) of patients with ovarian or breast cancer previously treated with platinum and/or PARP inhibitors.Experimental Design: cfDNA from 24 prospectively accrued patients with germline BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations, including 19 patients with platinum-resistant/refractory ovarian cancer and five patients with platinum and/or PARP inhibitor pretreated metastatic breast cancer, was subjected to massively parallel sequencing targeting all exons of 141 genes and all exons and introns of BRCA1 and BRCA2 Functional studies were performed to assess the impact of the putative BRCA1/2 reversion mutations on BRCA1/2 function.Results: Diverse and often polyclonal putative BRCA1 or BRCA2 reversion mutations were identified in cfDNA from four patients with ovarian cancer (21%) and from two patients with breast cancer (40%). BRCA2 reversion mutations were detected in cfDNA prior to PARP inhibitor treatment in a patient with breast cancer who did not respond to treatment and were enriched in plasma samples after PARP inhibitor therapy. Foci formation and immunoprecipitation assays suggest that a subset of the putative reversion mutations restored BRCA1/2 function.Conclusions: Putative BRCA1/2 reversion mutations can be detected by cfDNA sequencing analysis in patients with ovarian and breast cancer. Our findings warrant further investigation of cfDNA sequencing to identify putative BRCA1/2 reversion mutations and to aid the selection of patients for PARP inhibition therapy. Clin Cancer Res; 23(21); 6708-20. ©2017 AACR.

Martin, L.-.A. Ribas, R. Simigdala, N. Schuster, E. Pancholi, S. Tenev, T. Gellert, P. Buluwela, L. Harrod, A. Thornhill, A. Nikitorowicz-Buniak, J. Bhamra, A. Turgeon, M.-.O. Poulogiannis, G. Gao, Q. Martins, V. Hills, M. Garcia-Murillas, I. Fribbens, C. Patani, N. Li, Z. Sikora, M.J. Turner, N. Zwart, W. Oesterreich, S. Carroll, J. Ali, S. Dowsett, M (2017) Discovery of naturally occurring ESR1 mutations in breast cancer cell lines modelling endocrine resistance.. Show Abstract full text

Resistance to endocrine therapy remains a major clinical problem in breast cancer. Genetic studies highlight the potential role of estrogen receptor-α (ESR1) mutations, which show increased prevalence in the metastatic, endocrine-resistant setting. No naturally occurring ESR1 mutations have been reported in in vitro models of BC either before or after the acquisition of endocrine resistance making functional consequences difficult to study. We report the first discovery of naturally occurring ESR1 <sup>Y537C</sup> and ESR1 <sup>Y537S</sup> mutations in MCF7 and SUM44 ESR1-positive cell lines after acquisition of resistance to long-term-estrogen-deprivation (LTED) and subsequent resistance to fulvestrant (ICIR). Mutations were enriched with time, impacted on ESR1 binding to the genome and altered the ESR1 interactome. The results highlight the importance and functional consequence of these mutations and provide an important resource for studying endocrine resistance.

Turner, N.C () Signatures of DNA-Repair Deficiencies in Breast Cancer..
Turner, N.C. Finn, R.S. Martin, M. Im, S.-.A. DeMichele, A. Ettl, J. Diéras, V. Moulder, S. Lipatov, O. Colleoni, M. Cristofanilli, M. Lu, D.R. Mori, A. Giorgetti, C. Iyer, S. Bartlett, C.H. Gelmon, K.A (2018) Clinical considerations of the role of palbociclib in the management of advanced breast cancer patients with and without visceral metastases.. Show Abstract full text

Background: This report assesses the efficacy and safety of palbociclib plus endocrine therapy (ET) in women with hormone receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative advanced breast cancer (ABC) with or without visceral metastases. Patients and methods: Pre- and postmenopausal women with disease progression following prior ET (PALOMA-3; N = 521) and postmenopausal women untreated for ABC (PALOMA-2; N = 666) were randomized 2 : 1 to ET (fulvestrant or letrozole, respectively) plus palbociclib or placebo. Progression-free survival (PFS), safety, and patient-reported quality of life (QoL) were evaluated by prior treatment and visceral involvement. Results: Visceral metastases incidence was higher in patients with prior resistance to ET (58.3%, PALOMA-3) than in patients naive to ET in the ABC setting (48.6%, PALOMA-2). In patients with prior resistance to ET and visceral metastases, median PFS (mPFS) was 9.2 months with palbociclib plus fulvestrant versus 3.4 months with placebo plus fulvestrant [hazard ratio (HR), 0.47; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.35-0.61], and objective response rate (ORR) was 28.0% versus 6.7%, respectively. In patients with nonvisceral metastases, mPFS was 16.6 versus 7.3 months, HR 0.53; 95% CI 0.36-0.77. In patients with visceral disease and naive to ET in the advanced disease setting, mPFS was 19.3 months with palbociclib plus letrozole versus 12.9 months with placebo plus letrozole (HR 0.63; 95% CI 0.47-0.85); ORR was 55.1% versus 40.0%; in patients with nonvisceral disease, mPFS was not reached with palbociclib plus letrozole versus 16.8 months with placebo plus letrozole (HR 0.50; 95% CI 0.36-0.70). In patients with prior resistance to ET with visceral metastases, palbociclib plus fulvestrant significantly delayed deterioration of QoL versus placebo plus fulvestrant, whereas patient-reported QoL was maintained with palbociclib plus letrozole in patients naive to endocrine-based therapy for ABC. Conclusions: Palbociclib plus ET prolonged mPFS in patients with visceral metastases, increased ORRs, and in patients previously treated for ABC, delayed QoL deterioration, presenting a standard treatment option among patients with visceral metastases amenable to endocrine-based therapy. Clinical trial registration: NCT01942135, NCT01740427.

O'Leary, B. Hrebien, S. Morden, J.P. Beaney, M. Fribbens, C. Huang, X. Liu, Y. Bartlett, C.H. Koehler, M. Cristofanilli, M. Garcia-Murillas, I. Bliss, J.M. Turner, N.C (2018) Early circulating tumor DNA dynamics and clonal selection with palbociclib and fulvestrant for breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

CDK4/6 inhibition substantially improves progression-free survival (PFS) for women with advanced estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer, although there are no predictive biomarkers. Early changes in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) level may provide early response prediction, but the impact of tumor heterogeneity is unknown. Here we use plasma samples from patients in the randomized phase III PALOMA-3 study of CDK4/6 inhibitor palbociclib and fulvestrant for women with advanced breast cancer and show that relative change in PIK3CA ctDNA level after 15 days treatment strongly predicts PFS on palbociclib and fulvestrant (hazard ratio 3.94, log-rank p = 0.0013). ESR1 mutations selected by prior hormone therapy are shown to be frequently sub clonal, with ESR1 ctDNA dynamics offering limited prediction of clinical outcome. These results suggest that early ctDNA dynamics may provide a robust biomarker for CDK4/6 inhibitors, with early ctDNA dynamics demonstrating divergent response of tumor sub clones to treatment.

Merker, J.D. Oxnard, G.R. Compton, C. Diehn, M. Hurley, P. Lazar, A.J. Lindeman, N. Lockwood, C.M. Rai, A.J. Schilsky, R.L. Tsimberidou, A.M. Vasalos, P. Billman, B.L. Oliver, T.K. Bruinooge, S.S. Hayes, D.F. Turner, N.C (2018) Circulating Tumor DNA Analysis in Patients With Cancer: American Society of Clinical Oncology and College of American Pathologists Joint Review.. Show Abstract full text

PURPOSE: - Clinical use of analytical tests to assess genomic variants in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is increasing. This joint review from the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the College of American Pathologists summarizes current information about clinical ctDNA assays and provides a framework for future research. METHODS: - An Expert Panel conducted a literature review on the use of ctDNA assays for solid tumors, including preanalytical variables, analytical validity, interpretation and reporting, and clinical validity and utility. RESULTS: - The literature search identified 1338 references. Of those, 390, plus 31 references supplied by the Expert Panel, were selected for full-text review. There were 77 articles selected for inclusion. CONCLUSIONS: - The evidence indicates that testing for ctDNA is optimally performed on plasma collected in cell stabilization or EDTA tubes, with EDTA tubes processed within 6 hours of collection. Some ctDNA assays have demonstrated clinical validity and utility with certain types of advanced cancer; however, there is insufficient evidence of clinical validity and utility for the majority of ctDNA assays in advanced cancer. Evidence shows discordance between the results of ctDNA assays and genotyping tumor specimens, and supports tumor tissue genotyping to confirm undetected results from ctDNA tests. There is no evidence of clinical utility and little evidence of clinical validity of ctDNA assays in early-stage cancer, treatment monitoring, or residual disease detection. There is no evidence of clinical validity or clinical utility to suggest that ctDNA assays are useful for cancer screening, outside of a clinical trial. Given the rapid pace of research, reevaluation of the literature will shortly be required, along with the development of tools and guidance for clinical practice.

Merker, J.D. Oxnard, G.R. Compton, C. Diehn, M. Hurley, P. Lazar, A.J. Lindeman, N. Lockwood, C.M. Rai, A.J. Schilsky, R.L. Tsimberidou, A.M. Vasalos, P. Billman, B.L. Oliver, T.K. Bruinooge, S.S. Hayes, D.F. Turner, N.C (2018) Circulating Tumor DNA Analysis in Patients With Cancer: American Society of Clinical Oncology and College of American Pathologists Joint Review.. Show Abstract full text

Purpose Clinical use of analytical tests to assess genomic variants in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is increasing. This joint review from ASCO and the College of American Pathologists summarizes current information about clinical ctDNA assays and provides a framework for future research. Methods An Expert Panel conducted a literature review on the use of ctDNA assays for solid tumors, including pre-analytical variables, analytical validity, interpretation and reporting, and clinical validity and utility. Results The literature search identified 1,338 references. Of those, 390, plus 31 references supplied by the Expert Panel, were selected for full-text review. There were 77 articles selected for inclusion. Conclusion The evidence indicates that testing for ctDNA is optimally performed on plasma collected in cell stabilization or EDTA tubes, with EDTA tubes processed within 6 hours of collection. Some ctDNA assays have demonstrated clinical validity and utility with certain types of advanced cancer; however, there is insufficient evidence of clinical validity and utility for the majority of ctDNA assays in advanced cancer. Evidence shows discordance between the results of ctDNA assays and genotyping tumor specimens and supports tumor tissue genotyping to confirm undetected results from ctDNA tests. There is no evidence of clinical utility and little evidence of clinical validity of ctDNA assays in early-stage cancer, treatment monitoring, or residual disease detection. There is no evidence of clinical validity and clinical utility to suggest that ctDNA assays are useful for cancer screening, outside of a clinical trial. Given the rapid pace of research, re-evaluation of the literature will shortly be required, along with the development of tools and guidance for clinical practice.

Garcia-Murillas, I. Turner, N.C (2018) Assessing HER2 Amplification in Plasma cfDNA.. Show Abstract full text

Digital PCR (dPCR) is a highly accurate method to determine DNA concentration. In dPCR, DNA is portioned into many discrete single entities, and these are analyzed individually for the presence or absence of a target molecule of interest. Here we describe how digital PCR can be employed to determine the presence of oncogenic amplification through noninvasive analysis of circulating free DNA (cfDNA), and exemplify this approach by developing a plasma circulating free DNA dPCR assay for HER2 copy number.

Barry, P. Vatsiou, A. Spiteri, I. Nichol, D. Cresswell, G.D. Acar, A. Trahearn, N. Hrebien, S. Garcia-Murillas, I. Chkhaidze, K. Ermini, L. Huntingford, I.S. Cottom, H. Zabaglo, L. Koelble, K. Khalique, S. Rusby, J.E. Muscara, F. Dowsett, M. Maley, C.C. Natrajan, R. Yuan, Y. Schiavon, G. Turner, N. Sottoriva, A (2018) The Spatiotemporal Evolution of Lymph Node Spread in Early Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<b>Purpose:</b> The most significant prognostic factor in early breast cancer is lymph node involvement. This stage between localized and systemic disease is key to understanding breast cancer progression; however, our knowledge of the evolution of lymph node malignant invasion remains limited, as most currently available data are derived from primary tumors.<b>Experimental Design:</b> In 11 patients with treatment-naïve node-positive early breast cancer without clinical evidence of distant metastasis, we investigated lymph node evolution using spatial multiregion sequencing (<i>n</i> = 78 samples) of primary and lymph node deposits and genomic profiling of matched longitudinal circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA).<b>Results:</b> Linear evolution from primary to lymph node was rare (1/11), whereas the majority of cases displayed either early divergence between primary and nodes (4/11) or no detectable divergence (6/11), where both primary and nodal cells belonged to a single recent expansion of a metastatic clone. Divergence of metastatic subclones was driven in part by APOBEC. Longitudinal ctDNA samples from 2 of 7 subjects with evaluable plasma taken perioperatively reflected the two major evolutionary patterns and demonstrate that private mutations can be detected even from early metastatic nodal deposits. Moreover, node removal resulted in disappearance of private lymph node mutations in ctDNA.<b>Conclusions:</b> This study sheds new light on a crucial evolutionary step in the natural history of breast cancer, demonstrating early establishment of axillary lymph node metastasis in a substantial proportion of patients. <i>Clin Cancer Res; 24(19); 4763-70. ©2018 AACR</i>.

Mansukhani, S. Barber, L.J. Kleftogiannis, D. Moorcraft, S.Y. Davidson, M. Woolston, A. Proszek, P.Z. Griffiths, B. Fenwick, K. Herman, B. Matthews, N. O'Leary, B. Hulkki, S. Gonzalez De Castro, D. Patel, A. Wotherspoon, A. Okachi, A. Rana, I. Begum, R. Davies, M.N. Powles, T. von Loga, K. Hubank, M. Turner, N. Watkins, D. Chau, I. Cunningham, D. Lise, S. Starling, N. Gerlinger, M (2018) Ultra-Sensitive Mutation Detection and Genome-Wide DNA Copy Number Reconstruction by Error-Corrected Circulating Tumor DNA Sequencing.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Circulating free DNA sequencing (cfDNA-Seq) can portray cancer genome landscapes, but highly sensitive and specific technologies are necessary to accurately detect mutations with often low variant frequencies.<h4>Methods</h4>We developed a customizable hybrid-capture cfDNA-Seq technology using off-the-shelf molecular barcodes and a novel duplex DNA molecule identification tool for enhanced error correction.<h4>Results</h4>Modeling based on cfDNA yields from 58 patients showed that this technology, requiring 25 ng of cfDNA, could be applied to >95% of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). cfDNA-Seq of a 32-gene, 163.3-kbp target region detected 100% of single-nucleotide variants, with 0.15% variant frequency in spike-in experiments. Molecular barcode error correction reduced false-positive mutation calls by 97.5%. In 28 consecutively analyzed patients with mCRC, 80 out of 91 mutations previously detected by tumor tissue sequencing were called in the cfDNA. Call rates were similar for point mutations and indels. cfDNA-Seq identified typical mCRC driver mutations in patients in whom biopsy sequencing had failed or did not include key mCRC driver genes. Mutations only called in cfDNA but undetectable in matched biopsies included a subclonal resistance driver mutation to anti-EGFR antibodies in <i>KRAS</i>, parallel evolution of multiple <i>PIK3CA</i> mutations in 2 cases, and <i>TP53</i> mutations originating from clonal hematopoiesis. Furthermore, cfDNA-Seq off-target read analysis allowed simultaneous genome-wide copy number profile reconstruction in 20 of 28 cases. Copy number profiles were validated by low-coverage whole-genome sequencing.<h4>Conclusions</h4>This error-corrected, ultradeep cfDNA-Seq technology with a customizable target region and publicly available bioinformatics tools enables broad insights into cancer genomes and evolution.<h4>Clinicaltrialsgov identifier</h4>NCT02112357.

Diéras, V. Rugo, H.S. Schnell, P. Gelmon, K. Cristofanilli, M. Loi, S. Colleoni, M. Lu, D.R. Mori, A. Gauthier, E. Huang Bartlett, C. Slamon, D.J. Turner, N.C. Finn, R.S (2019) Long-term Pooled Safety Analysis of Palbociclib in Combination With Endocrine Therapy for HR+/HER2- Advanced Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Palbociclib administered with endocrine therapy was tolerable when the overall incidence of toxicities was assessed separately for three PALOMA studies. This study analyzed pooled, longer-term PALOMA safety data longitudinally.<h4>Methods</h4>Data were pooled from three randomized phase II and III studies (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00721409, NCT01740427, NCT01942135) of hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2‒negative advanced breast cancer patients. Front-line patients were randomly assigned to receive letrozole with/without palbociclib (PALOMA-1) or letrozole plus palbociclib/placebo (PALOMA-2). In PALOMA-3, patients with prior endocrine resistance received fulvestrant plus palbociclib/placebo. The cumulative event rates of adverse events (AEs), reporting up to 50 months of treatment, were assessed over time.<h4>Results</h4>Patients who received endocrine therapy (n = 1343) were included in this pooled analysis (872 were also treated with palbociclib, and 471 were not). The most common AEs with palbociclib plus endocrine therapy were neutropenia and infections (any grade, 80.6% and 54.7%, respectively), which were higher than in the endocrine monotherapy arm (any grade, 5.3% and 36.9%). The most common hematologic AEs (≥15.0% in the palbociclib arm) were more likely to be reported in the initial months of the study, after which time the cumulative event rate did not substantially increase. With palbociclib plus endocrine therapy, any grade AEs leading to permanent discontinuation over three years occurred in only 8.3% of patients.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Based on these long-term safety analyses, there is no evidence of specific cumulative or delayed toxicities with palbociclib plus endocrine therapy, supporting the ongoing investigation of palbociclib plus endocrine therapy in early breast cancer (NCT02513394).

Lopez-Knowles, E. Pearson, A. Schuster, G. Gellert, P. Ribas, R. Yeo, B. Cutts, R. Buus, R. Garcia-Murillas, I. Haynes, B. Martin, L.-.A. Smith, I. Turner, N. Dowsett, M (2019) Molecular characterisation of aromatase inhibitor-resistant advanced breast cancer: the phenotypic effect of ESR1 mutations.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Several thousand breast cancer patients develop resistance to aromatase inhibitors (AIs) each year in the UK. Rational treatment requires an improved molecular characterisation of resistant disease.<h4>Materials and methods</h4>The mutational landscape of 198 regions in 16 key breast cancer genes and RNA expression of 209 genes covering key pathways was evaluated in paired biopsies before AI treatment and at progression on AI from 48 patients. Validity of findings was assessed in another five ESR1-mutated tumours progressing on AI.<h4>Results</h4>Eighty-nine mutations were identified in 41 matched pairs (PIK3CA in 27%; CDH1 in 20%). ESR1 (n = 5), ERBB2 (n = 1) and MAP2K4 (n = 1) had mutations in the secondary sample only. There was very high heterogeneity in gene expression between AI-resistant tumours with few patterns apparent. However, in the ESR1-mutated AI-resistant tumours, expression of four classical oestrogen-regulated genes (ERGs) was sevenfold higher than in ESR1 wild-type tumours, a finding confirmed in the second set of ESR1-mutated tumours. In ESR1 wild-type AI-resistant tumours ERG expression remained suppressed and was uncoupled from the recovery seen in proliferation.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Major genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity exists between AI-resistant disease. ESR1 mutations appear to drive oestrogen-regulated processes in resistant tumours.

O'Leary, B. Cutts, R.J. Liu, Y. Hrebien, S. Huang, X. Fenwick, K. André, F. Loibl, S. Loi, S. Garcia-Murillas, I. Cristofanilli, M. Huang Bartlett, C. Turner, N.C (2018) The Genetic Landscape and Clonal Evolution of Breast Cancer Resistance to Palbociclib plus Fulvestrant in the PALOMA-3 Trial.. Show Abstract full text

CDK4/6 inhibition with endocrine therapy is now a standard of care for advanced estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer. Mechanisms of CDK4/6 inhibitor resistance have been described preclinically, with limited evidence from clinical samples. We conducted paired baseline and end-of-treatment circulating tumor DNA sequencing from 195 patients in the PALOMA-3 randomized phase III trial of palbociclib plus fulvestrant versus placebo plus fulvestrant. We show that clonal evolution occurs frequently during treatment, reflecting substantial subclonal complexity in breast cancer that has progressed after prior endocrine therapy. <i>RB1</i> mutations emerged only in the palbociclib plus fulvestrant arm and in a minority of patients (6/127, 4.7%, <i>P</i> = 0.041). New driver mutations emerged in <i>PIK3CA</i> (<i>P</i> = 0.00069) and <i>ESR1</i> after treatment in both arms, in particular <i>ESR1</i> Y537S (<i>P</i> = 0.0037). Evolution of driver gene mutations was uncommon in patients progressing early on palbociclib plus fulvestrant but common in patients progressing later on treatment. These findings inform future treatment strategies to address resistance to palbociclib plus fulvestrant.<b>Significance:</b> Acquired mutations from fulvestrant are a major driver of resistance to fulvestrant and palbociclib combination therapy. <i>ESR1</i> Y537S mutation promotes resistance to fulvestrant. Clonal evolution results in frequent acquisition of driver mutations in patients progressing late on therapy, which suggests that early and late progression have distinct mechanisms of resistance. <i>Cancer Discov; 8(11); 1390-403. ©2018 AACR.</i> <i>See related commentary by Schiff and Jeselsohn, p. 1352</i> <i>This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1333</i>.

Hurvitz, S.A. Quek, R.G.W. Turner, N.C. Telli, M.L. Rugo, H.S. Mailliez, A. Ettl, J. Grischke, E. Mina, L.A. Balmaña, J. Fasching, P.A. Bhattacharyya, H. Hannah, A.L. Robson, M.E. Wardley, A.M (2018) Quality of life with talazoparib after platinum or multiple cytotoxic non-platinum regimens in patients with advanced breast cancer and germline BRCA1/2 mutations: patient-reported outcomes from the ABRAZO phase 2 trial.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Talazoparib (1 mg/day) exhibited promising efficacy and safety in patients with advanced breast cancer during ABRAZO (NCT02034916); this study evaluated patient-reported outcomes (PROs).<h4>Patients and methods</h4>ABRAZO is a two-cohort, two-stage, phase 2 study of talazoparib in patients with advanced breast cancer after a response to prior platinum-based therapy (cohort 1 [C1], n = 49) or ≥3 platinum-free cytotoxic-based regimens (cohort 2 [C2], n = 35). PROs were assessed on day 1 (baseline), every 6 weeks for an initial 24 weeks, and every 12 weeks thereafter until progression, using the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 30 (QLQ-C30) and its breast cancer module, QLQ-BR23.<h4>Results</h4>Global health status/quality of life (GHS/QoL) was maintained from baseline across all time points for both C1 and C2. For C1 and C2, median time to deterioration (TTD) of GHS/QoL (95% confidence interval [CI]) was 2.8 (2.1, 3.0) and 5.5 (4.2, 5.7) months, respectively. Median TTD for all QLQ-C30 functional scales for C1 and C2 ranged 2.1-3.1 months and 4.2-5.6 months, respectively; median TTD for all QLQ-BR23 symptom scales ranged 2.6-4.0 months and 4.2-5.6 months, respectively. There were no statistically significant differences in estimated overall change from baseline in the GHS/QoL scale for both cohorts (C1: -2.6 [95% CI, -7.8, 2.5]; C2: 1.2 [95% CI, -5.5, 8.0]). Significant overall improvements in the breast symptoms and arm symptoms and the future perspective of patients in C1 and C2 were observed, despite the statistically significant and clinically meaningful overall deterioration among patients regarding their role functioning (in C1) and dyspnoea symptoms (in C2).<h4>Conclusion</h4>Despite the statistically significant and clinically meaningful overall deterioration among patients regarding their role functioning (in C1) and dyspnoea symptoms (in C2), patients in both C1 and C2 reported significant overall improvements in their breast symptoms, arm symptoms and future perspective, and their GHS/QoL was maintained from baseline.

Turner, N.C. Slamon, D.J. Ro, J. Bondarenko, I. Im, S.-.A. Masuda, N. Colleoni, M. DeMichele, A. Loi, S. Verma, S. Iwata, H. Harbeck, N. Loibl, S. André, F. Puyana Theall, K. Huang, X. Giorgetti, C. Huang Bartlett, C. Cristofanilli, M (2018) Overall Survival with Palbociclib and Fulvestrant in Advanced Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

BACKGROUND: The cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6 (CDK4/6) inhibitor palbociclib, in combination with fulvestrant therapy, prolongs progression-free survival among patients with hormone-receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative advanced breast cancer. We report the results of a prespecified analysis of overall survival. METHODS: We randomly assigned patients with hormone-receptor-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer who had progression or relapse during previous endocrine therapy to receive palbociclib plus fulvestrant or placebo plus fulvestrant. We analyzed overall survival; the effect of palbociclib according to the prespecified stratification factors of presence or absence of sensitivity to endocrine therapy, presence or absence of visceral metastatic disease, and menopausal status; the efficacy of subsequent therapies after disease progression; and safety. RESULTS: Among 521 patients who underwent randomization, the median overall survival was 34.9 months (95% confidence interval [CI], 28.8 to 40.0) in the palbociclib-fulvestrant group and 28.0 months (95% CI, 23.6 to 34.6) in the placebo-fulvestrant group (hazard ratio for death, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.64 to 1.03; P=0.09; absolute difference, 6.9 months). CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment after the completion of the trial regimen occurred in 16% of the patients in the placebo-fulvestrant group. Among 410 patients with sensitivity to previous endocrine therapy, the median overall survival was 39.7 months (95% CI, 34.8 to 45.7) in the palbociclib-fulvestrant group and 29.7 months (95% CI, 23.8 to 37.9) in the placebo-fulvestrant group (hazard ratio, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.55 to 0.94; absolute difference, 10.0 months). The median duration of subsequent therapy was similar in the two groups, and the median time to the receipt of chemotherapy was 17.6 months in the palbociclib-fulvestrant group, as compared with 8.8 months in the placebo-fulvestrant group (hazard ratio, 0.58; 95% CI, 0.47 to 0.73; P<0.001). No new safety signals were observed with 44.8 months of follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Among patients with hormone-receptor-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer who had sensitivity to previous endocrine therapy, treatment with palbociclib-fulvestrant resulted in longer overall survival than treatment with placebo-fulvestrant. The differences in overall survival in the entire trial group were not significant. (Funded by Pfizer; PALOMA-3 ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01942135 .).

Turner, N.C. Telli, M.L. Rugo, H.S. Mailliez, A. Ettl, J. Grischke, E.-.M. Mina, L.A. Balmaña, J. Fasching, P.A. Hurvitz, S.A. Wardley, A.M. Chappey, C. Hannah, A.L. Robson, M.E. ABRAZO Study Group, (2019) A Phase II Study of Talazoparib after Platinum or Cytotoxic Nonplatinum Regimens in Patients with Advanced Breast Cancer and Germline <i>BRCA1/2</i> Mutations (ABRAZO).. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>To assess talazoparib activity in germline <i>BRCA1/2</i> mutation carriers with advanced breast cancer.<h4>Patients and methods</h4>ABRAZO (NCT02034916) was a two-cohort, two-stage, phase II study of talazoparib (1 mg/day) in germline <i>BRCA</i> mutation carriers with a response to prior platinum with no progression on or within 8 weeks of the last platinum dose (cohort 1) or ≥3 platinum-free cytotoxic regimens (cohort 2) for advanced breast cancer. Primary endpoint was confirmed objective response rate (ORR) by independent radiological assessment.<h4>Results</h4>We enrolled 84 patients (cohort 1, <i>n</i> = 49; cohort 2, <i>n</i> = 35) from May 2014 to February 2016. Median age was 50 (range, 31-75) years. Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) incidence was 59% (cohort 1) and 17% (cohort 2). Median number of prior cytotoxic regimens for advanced breast cancer was two and four, respectively. Confirmed ORR was 21% [95% confidence interval (CI), 10-35; cohort 1] and 37% [95% CI, 22-55; cohort 2]. Median duration of response was 5.8 and 3.8 months, respectively. Confirmed ORR was 23% (<i>BRCA1</i>), 33% (<i>BRCA2</i>), 26% (TNBC), and 29% (hormone receptor-positive). The most common all-grade adverse events (AE) included anemia (52%), fatigue (45%), and nausea (42%). Talazoparib-related AEs led to drug discontinuation in 3 (4%) patients. In an exploratory analysis, longer platinum-free interval was associated with higher response rate in cohort 1 (0% ORR with interval <8 weeks; 47% ORR with interval >6 months).<h4>Conclusions</h4>Talazoparib exhibited promising antitumor activity in patients with advanced breast cancer and germline <i>BRCA</i> mutation.

Condorelli, R. Mosele, F. Verret, B. Bachelot, T. Bedard, P.L. Cortes, J. Hyman, D.M. Juric, D. Krop, I. Bieche, I. Saura, C. Sotiriou, C. Cardoso, F. Loibl, S. Andre, F. Turner, N.C (2019) Genomic alterations in breast cancer: level of evidence for actionability according to ESMO Scale for Clinical Actionability of molecular Targets (ESCAT).. Show Abstract full text

Better knowledge of the tumor genomic landscapes has helped to develop more effective targeted drugs. However, there is no tool to interpret targetability of genomic alterations assessed by next-generation sequencing in the context of clinical practice. Our aim is to rank the level of evidence of individual recurrent genomic alterations observed in breast cancer based on the ESMO Scale for Clinical Actionability of molecular Targets (ESCAT) in order to help the clinicians to prioritize treatment. Analyses of databases suggested that there are around 40 recurrent driver alterations in breast cancer. ERBB2 amplification, germline BRCA1/2 mutations, PIK3CA mutations were classified tier of evidence IA based on large randomized trials showing antitumor activity of targeted therapies in patients presenting the alterations. NTRK fusions and microsatellite instability (MSI) were ranked IC. ESR1 mutations and PTEN loss were ranked tier IIA, and ERBB2 mutations and AKT1 mutations tier IIB. Somatic BRCA 1/2 mutations, MDM2 amplifications and ERBB 3 mutations were ranked tier III. Seventeen genes were ranked tier IV based on preclinical evidence. Finally, FGFR1 and CCND1 were ranked tier X alterations because previous studies have shown lack of actionability.

Dowsett, M. Turner, N (2019) Estimating Risk of Recurrence for Early Breast Cancer: Integrating Clinical and Genomic Risk..
Turner, N.C. Liu, Y. Zhu, Z. Loi, S. Colleoni, M. Loibl, S. DeMichele, A. Harbeck, N. André, F. Bayar, M.A. Michiels, S. Zhang, Z. Giorgetti, C. Arnedos, M. Huang Bartlett, C. Cristofanilli, M (2019) Cyclin E1 Expression and Palbociclib Efficacy in Previously Treated Hormone Receptor-Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

PURPOSE: A large-panel gene expression analysis was conducted to identify biomarkers associated with the effectiveness of adding palbociclib to fulvestrant. METHODS: The PALOMA-3 ( ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01942135) trial randomly assigned 521 endocrine-pretreated patients with metastatic breast cancer to receive palbociclib plus fulvestrant or placebo plus fulvestrant. Primary analysis was first conducted on 10 genes on the basis of pathway biology and evidence from previous studies followed by a systematic panel-wide search among 2,534 cancer-related genes. The association of gene expression with the effect of palbociclib on progression-free survival (PFS) was evaluated using Cox proportional hazards regression analysis, with gene expression as a continuous variable or dichotomized by median. An independent breast cancer cohort from the Preoperative Palbociclib (POP) Clinical Trial ( ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02008734) was used for validation, in 61 patients with primary breast cancer treated with 2 weeks of palbociclib. RESULTS: In the PALOMA-3 trial, 302 patients had tumor tissue analyzed (palbociclib arm, 194 patients; placebo arm, 108 patients). Palbociclib efficacy was lower in patients with high versus low cyclin E1 ( CCNE1) mRNA expression (median PFS: palbociclib arm, 7.6 v 14.1 months; placebo arm, 4.0 v 4.8 months, respectively; interaction P unadjusted = .00238; false discovery rate-adjusted P = .0238). CCNE1 mRNA was more predictive in metastatic than in archival primary biopsy tissue samples. No significant interaction was found between treatment and expression levels of CDK4, CDK6, cyclin D1, and RB1. Palbociclib was efficacious in both luminal A and luminal B tumors. High CCNE1 mRNA expression was associated with poor antiproliferative activity of palbociclib in the POP trial ( P = .005). CONCLUSION: Addition of palbociclib to fulvestrant demonstrated efficacy in all biomarker groups, although high CCNE1 mRNA expression was associated with relative resistance to palbociclib.

Desmedt, C. Pingitore, J. Rothé, F. Marchio, C. Clatot, F. Rouas, G. Richard, F. Bertucci, F. Mariani, O. Galant, C. Fribbens, C. O'Leary, B. van den Eynden, G. Salgado, R. Turner, N.C. Piccart, M. Vincent-Salomon, A. Pruneri, G. Larsimont, D. Sotiriou, C (2019) <i>ESR1</i> mutations in metastatic lobular breast cancer patients.. Show Abstract full text

Invasive lobular breast cancer (ILC) represents the second most common histology of breast cancer after invasive ductal breast cancer (IDC), accounts for up to 15% of all invasive cases and generally express the estrogen receptor (ER, coded by the <i>ESR1</i> gene). <i>ESR1</i> mutations have been associated with resistance to endocrine therapy, however these have not been specifically evaluated in ILC. We assessed the frequency of <i>ESR1</i> mutations by droplet digital PCR in a retrospective multi-centric series of matched primary tumor and recurrence samples (<i>n</i> = 279) from 80 metastatic ER-positive ILC patients. We further compared <i>ESR1</i> mutations between IDC and ILC patients in metastatic samples from MSKCC-IMPACT (<i>n</i> = 595 IDC and 116 ILC) and in ctDNA from the SoFEA and PALOMA-3 trials (<i>n</i> = 416 IDC and 76 ILC). In the retrospective series, the metastases from seven patients (9%) harbored <i>ESR1</i> mutations, which were absent from the interrogated primary samples. Five patients (6%) had a mutation in the primary tumor or axillary metastasis, which could not be detected in the matched distant metastasis. In the MSKCC-IMPACT cohort, as well as in the SoFEA and PALOMA-3 trials, there were no differences in prevalence and distribution of the mutations between IDC and ILC, with D538G being the most frequent mutation in both histological subtypes. To conclude, no patient had an identical <i>ESR1</i> mutation in the early and metastatic disease in the retrospective ILC series. In the external series, there was no difference in terms of prevalence and type of ESR1 mutations between ILC and IDC.

Coakley, M. Garcia-Murillas, I. Turner, N.C (2019) Molecular Residual Disease and Adjuvant Trial Design in Solid Tumors.. Show Abstract full text

Advances in diagnosis and treatment have resulted in a high rate of survival for many patients with early-stage cancers. However, identifying who is at ongoing risk of relapse remains of high priority to direct subsequent adjuvant therapy. Multiple recent retrospective studies have shown that detection of tumor-derived materials in blood, in particular with circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis, can identify patients with residual disease before clinical or radiological evidence of metastatic disease, anticipating relapse with relatively high sensitivity and high specificity. We discuss how these emerging technologies are defining new subgroups of patients with "Molecular Residual Disease" and "Molecular Relapse." We outline how novel clinical trials in the adjuvant setting designed for these new subgroups of patients may improve selection for adjuvant therapies, and provide new surrogate endpoints that may allow for early registration of adjuvant therapies and novel clinical trial designs in the adjuvant setting. We discuss the current limitations of these techniques and the routes to clinical implementation.

Hrebien, S. Citi, V. Garcia-Murillas, I. Cutts, R. Fenwick, K. Kozarewa, I. McEwen, R. Ratnayake, J. Maudsley, R. Carr, T.H. de Bruin, E.C. Schiavon, G. Oliveira, M. Turner, N (2019) Early ctDNA dynamics as a surrogate for progression-free survival in advanced breast cancer in the BEECH trial.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Dynamic changes in circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) levels may predict long-term outcome. We utilised samples from a phase I/II randomised trial (BEECH) to assess ctDNA dynamics as a surrogate for progression-free survival (PFS) and early predictor of drug efficacy.<h4>Patients and methods</h4>Patients with estrogen receptor-positive advanced metastatic breast cancer (ER+ mBC) in the BEECH study, paclitaxel plus placebo versus paclitaxel plus AKT inhibitor capivasertib, had plasma samples collected for ctDNA analysis at baseline and at multiple time points in the development cohort (safety run-in, part A) and validation cohort (randomised, part B). Baseline sample ctDNA sequencing identified mutations for longitudinal analysis and mutation-specific digital droplet PCR (ddPCR) assays were utilised to assess change in ctDNA abundance (allele fraction) between baseline and 872 on-treatment samples. Primary objective was to assess whether early suppression of ctDNA, based on pre-defined criteria from the development cohort, independently predicted outcome in the validation cohort.<h4>Results</h4>In the development cohort, suppression of ctDNA was apparent after 8 days of treatment (P = 0.014), with cycle 2 day 1 (4 weeks) identified as the optimal time point to predict PFS from early ctDNA dynamics. In the validation cohort, median PFS was 11.1 months in patients with suppressed ctDNA at 4 weeks and 6.4 months in patients with high ctDNA (hazard ratio = 0.20, 95% confidence interval 0.083-0.50, P < 0.0001). There was no difference in the level of ctDNA suppression between patients randomised to capivasertib or placebo overall (P = 0.904) nor in the PIK3CA mutant subpopulation (P = 0.071). Clonal haematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) was evident in 30% (18/59) baseline samples, although CHIP had no effect on tolerance of chemotherapy nor on PFS.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Early on-treatment ctDNA dynamics are a surrogate for PFS. Dynamic ctDNA assessment has the potential to substantially enhance early drug development.<h4>Clinical registration number</h4>NCT01625286.

Kemp, Z. Turnbull, A. Yost, S. Seal, S. Mahamdallie, S. Poyastro-Pearson, E. Warren-Perry, M. Eccleston, A. Tan, M.-.M. Teo, S.H. Turner, N. Strydom, A. George, A. Rahman, N (2019) Evaluation of Cancer-Based Criteria for Use in Mainstream BRCA1 and BRCA2 Genetic Testing in Patients With Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Importance</h4>Increasing BRCA1 and BRCA2 (collectively termed herein as BRCA) gene testing is required to improve cancer management and prevent BRCA-related cancers.<h4>Objective</h4>To evaluate mainstream genetic testing using cancer-based criteria in patients with cancer.<h4>Design, setting, and participants</h4>A quality improvement study and cost-effectiveness analysis of different BRCA testing selection criteria and access procedures to evaluate feasibility, acceptability, and mutation detection performance was conducted at the Royal Marsden National Health Service Foundation Trust as part of the Mainstreaming Cancer Genetics (MCG) Programme. Participants included 1184 patients with cancer who were undergoing genetic testing between September 1, 2013, and February 28, 2017.<h4>Main outcomes and measures</h4>Mutation rates, quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios were the primary outcomes.<h4>Results</h4>Of the 1184 patients (1158 women [97.8%]) meeting simple cancer-based criteria, 117 had a BRCA mutation (9.9%). The mutation rate was similar in retrospective United Kingdom (10.2% [235 of 2294]) and prospective Malaysian (9.7% [103 of 1061]) breast cancer studies. If traditional family history criteria had been used, more than 50% of the mutation-positive individuals would have been missed. Of the 117 mutation-positive individuals, 115 people (98.3%) attended their genetics appointment and cascade to relatives is underway in all appropriate families (85 of 85). Combining with the equivalent ovarian cancer study provides 5 simple cancer-based criteria for BRCA testing with a 10% mutation rate: (1) ovarian cancer; (2) breast cancer diagnosed when patients are 45 years or younger; (3) 2 primary breast cancers, both diagnosed when patients are 60 years or younger; (4) triple-negative breast cancer; and (5) male breast cancer. A sixth criterion-breast cancer plus a parent, sibling, or child with any of the other criteria-can be added to address family history. Criteria 1 through 5 are considered the MCG criteria, and criteria 1 through 6 are considered the MCGplus criteria. Testing using MCG or MCGplus criteria is cost-effective with cost-effectiveness ratios of $1330 per discounted QALYs and $1225 per discounted QALYs, respectively, and appears to lead to cancer and mortality reductions (MCG: 804 cancers, 161 deaths; MCGplus: 1020 cancers, 204 deaths per year over 50 years). Use of MCG or MCGplus criteria might allow detection of all BRCA mutations in patients with breast cancer in the United Kingdom through testing one-third of patients. Feedback questionnaires from 259 patients and 23 cancer team members (12 oncologists, 8 surgeons, and 3 nurse specialists) showed acceptability of the process with 100% of patients pleased they had genetic testing and 100% of cancer team members confident to approve patients for genetic testing. Use of MCGplus criteria also appeared to be time and resource efficient, requiring 95% fewer genetic consultations than the traditional process.<h4>Conclusions and relevance</h4>This study suggests that mainstream testing using simple, cancer-based criteria might be able to efficiently deliver consistent, cost-effective, patient-centered BRCA testing.

Litton, J.K. Burstein, H.J. Turner, N.C (2019) Molecular Testing in Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Molecular testing for genetic and genomic variation has become an integral part of breast cancer management. Patients with a family history of breast cancer or other tumors, bilateral breast cancers, or early-onset breast cancers warrant genetic testing to determine whether a hereditary cancer syndrome is present. The availability of PARP inhibitors-drugs that are selectively active in BRCA1/2-associated breast cancers-has created the need for hereditary cancer testing for all patients diagnosed with advanced breast cancer. Tumor genomic profiling is the standard of care for many types of malignancies and is becoming increasingly important in the management of advanced breast cancer. Targetable mutations in advanced breast cancer include PIK3CA, HER2, and rare instances of mismatch deficiency or other targets for tyrosine kinase inhibitors. The development of methods for sequencing cell-free DNA should allow for broader and easier implementation of tumor genomic testing. Transcriptome-based expression signatures have become the standard of care in the management of early-stage estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers. These assays provide prognostic significance in the setting of adjuvant endocrine therapy and are predictive for benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy. Collectively, these developments underscore the contemporary reality that molecular testing is now part of the clinical management for the majority of patients with breast cancer.

O'Leary, B. Hrebien, S. Beaney, M. Fribbens, C. Garcia-Murillas, I. Jiang, J. Li, Y. Huang Bartlett, C. André, F. Loibl, S. Loi, S. Cristofanilli, M. Turner, N.C (2019) Comparison of BEAMing and Droplet Digital PCR for Circulating Tumor DNA Analysis.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) assays are increasingly used for clinical decision-making, but it is unknown how well different assays agree. We aimed to assess the agreement in ctDNA mutation calling between BEAMing (beads, emulsion, amplification, and magnetics) and droplet digital PCR (ddPCR), 2 of the most commonly used digital PCR techniques for detecting mutations in ctDNA.<h4>Methods</h4>Baseline plasma samples from patients with advanced breast cancer enrolled in the phase 3 PALOMA-3 trial were assessed for <i>ESR1</i> and <i>PIK3CA</i> mutations in ctDNA with both BEAMing and ddPCR. Concordance between the 2 approaches was assessed, with exploratory analyses to estimate the importance of sampling effects.<h4>Results</h4>Of the 521 patients enrolled, 363 had paired baseline ctDNA analysis. <i>ESR1</i> mutation detection was 24.2% (88/363) for BEAMing and 25.3% (92/363) for ddPCR, with good agreement between the 2 techniques (κ = 0.9l; 95% CI, 0.85-0.95). <i>PIK3CA</i> mutation detection rates were 26.2% (95/363) for BEAMing and 22.9% (83/363) for ddPCR, with good agreement (κ = 0.87; 95% CI, 0.81-0.93). Discordancy was observed for 3.9% patients with <i>ESR1</i> mutations and 5.0% with <i>PIK3CA</i> mutations. Assessment of individual mutations suggested higher rates of discordancy for less common mutations (<i>P</i> = 0.019). The majority of discordant calls occurred at allele frequency <1%, predominantly resulting from stochastic sampling effects.<h4>Conclusions</h4>This large, clinically relevant comparison showed good agreement between BEAMing and ddPCR, suggesting sufficient reproducibility for clinical use. Much of the observed discordancy may be related to sampling effects, potentially explaining many of the differences in the currently available ctDNA literature.

Battisti, N.M.L. True, V. Chaabouni, N. Chopra, N. Lee, K. Shepherd, S. Shapira-Rotenberg, T. Joshi, R. McGrath, S. Okines, A. Parton, M. Turner, N. Mohammed, K. Allen, M. Johnston, S. Ring, A (2020) Pathological complete response to neoadjuvant systemic therapy in 789 early and locally advanced breast cancer patients: The Royal Marsden experience.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Pathological complete response (pCR) after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) for breast cancer predicts the risk of recurrence and increasingly may indicate the need for additional therapy postoperatively.<h4>Methods</h4>We identified non-metastatic breast cancer patients receiving NACT during 2013-2017. Patients' and disease characteristics, rates of pCR (ypT0-is ypN0), toxicities, dose delays and reductions, and survival outcomes were recorded.<h4>Results</h4>789 patients had median age of 50 years. 67.8% had stage II disease, 71.1% had grade 3 , and 91.8% had ductal histopathology. 32.8% had estrogen receptor (ER)-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative, 25.5% had triple-negative (TN), and 38.0% HER2-positive disease. 6.8% received platinum. 48.2% of the HER2-positive patients received trastuzumab and pertuzumab and 51.8% received trastuzumab. Overall pCR rate was 33.5% and differed according to disease subtype, receptor status, grade, histology, and early discontinuation, but not according to age, dose reductions/delays, or year of treatment. The addition of pertuzumab to trastuzumab marginally improved the pCR rates. Survival outcomes were better following pCR.<h4>Conclusions</h4>In our analysis, pCR rates are consistent with the published data. Even with contemporary therapies, many patients have residual disease following NACT, suggesting a significant risk of recurrence, and may benefit from additional postoperative systemic therapy.

Hui, R. Pearson, A. Cortes Castan, J. Campbell, C. Poirot, C. Azim, H.A. Fumagalli, D. Lambertini, M. Daly, F. Arahmani, A. Perez-Garcia, J. Aftimos, P.G. Bedard, P. Xuereb, L. Loibl, S. Loi, S. Pierrat, M.-.J. Turner, N.C. André, F. Curigliano, G (2018) Lucitanib for the treatment of HR+ HER2- metastatic breast cancer (MBC) patients (pts): Results from the multicohort phase II FINESSE trial..
Pearson, A. Proszek, P. Pascual, J. Fribbens, C. Shamsher, M.K. Kingston, B. O'Leary, B. Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Cutts, R.J. Garcia-Murillas, I. Bye, H. Walker, B.A. Gonzalez De Castro, D. Yuan, L. Jamal, S. Hubank, M. Lopez-Knowles, E. Schuster, E.F. Dowsett, M. Osin, P. Nerurkar, A. Parton, M. Okines, A.F.C. Johnston, S.R.D. Ring, A. Turner, N.C (2020) Inactivating <i>NF1</i> Mutations Are Enriched in Advanced Breast Cancer and Contribute to Endocrine Therapy Resistance.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Advanced breast cancer (ABC) has not been subjected to the same degree of molecular scrutiny as early primary cancer. Breast cancer evolves with time and under the selective pressure of treatment, with the potential to acquire mutations with resistance to treatment and disease progression. To identify potentially targetable mutations in advanced breast cancer, we performed prospective molecular characterization of a cohort of patients with ABC.<h4>Experimental design</h4>Biopsies from patients with advanced breast cancer were sequenced with a 41 genes targeted panel in the ABC Biopsy (ABC-Bio) study. Blood samples were collected at disease progression for circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis, along with matched primary tumor to assess for acquisition in ABC in a subset of patients.<h4>Results</h4>We sequenced 210 ABC samples, demonstrating enrichment compared with primary disease for potentially targetable mutations in <i>HER2</i> (in 6.19% of samples), <i>AKT1</i> (7.14%), and <i>NF1</i> (8.10%). Of these enriched mutations, we show that <i>NF1</i> mutations were frequently acquired in ABC, not present in the original primary disease. In ER-positive cancer cell line models, loss of <i>NF1</i> resulted in endocrine therapy resistance, through both ER-dependent and -independent mechanisms. NF1 loss promoted ER-independent cyclin D1 expression, which could be therapeutically targeted with CDK4/6 inhibitors <i>in vitro</i>. Patients with <i>NF1</i> mutations detected in baseline circulating tumor DNA had a good outcome on the CDK4/6 inhibitor palbociclib and fulvestrant.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Our research identifies multiple therapeutic opportunities for advanced breast cancer and identifies the previously underappreciated acquisition of <i>NF1</i> mutations.

Schmid, P. Abraham, J. Chan, S. Wheatley, D. Brunt, A.M. Nemsadze, G. Baird, R.D. Park, Y.H. Hall, P.S. Perren, T. Stein, R.C. Mangel, L. Ferrero, J.-.M. Phillips, M. Conibear, J. Cortes, J. Foxley, A. de Bruin, E.C. McEwen, R. Stetson, D. Dougherty, B. Sarker, S.-.J. Prendergast, A. McLaughlin-Callan, M. Burgess, M. Lawrence, C. Cartwright, H. Mousa, K. Turner, N.C (2020) Capivasertib Plus Paclitaxel Versus Placebo Plus Paclitaxel As First-Line Therapy for Metastatic Triple-Negative Breast Cancer: The PAKT Trial.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT signaling pathway is frequently activated in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). The AKT inhibitor capivasertib has shown preclinical activity in TNBC models, and drug sensitivity has been associated with activation of PI3K or AKT and/or deletions of PTEN. The PAKT trial was designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of adding capivasertib to paclitaxel as first-line therapy for TNBC.<h4>Patients and methods</h4>This double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized phase II trial recruited women with untreated metastatic TNBC. A total of 140 patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to paclitaxel 90 mg/m<sup>2</sup> (days 1, 8, 15) with either capivasertib (400 mg twice daily) or placebo (days 2-5, 9-12, 16-19) every 28 days until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. The primary end point was progression-free survival (PFS). Secondary end points included overall survival (OS), PFS and OS in the subgroup with <i>PIK3CA</i>/<i>AKT1</i>/<i>PTEN</i> alterations, tumor response, and safety.<h4>Results</h4>Median PFS was 5.9 months with capivasertib plus paclitaxel and 4.2 months with placebo plus paclitaxel (hazard ratio [HR], 0.74; 95% CI, 0.50 to 1.08; 1-sided <i>P</i> = .06 [predefined significance level, 1-sided <i>P</i> = .10]). Median OS was 19.1 months with capivasertib plus paclitaxel and 12.6 months with placebo plus paclitaxel (HR, 0.61; 95% CI, 0.37 to 0.99; 2-sided <i>P</i> = .04). In patients with <i>PIK3CA</i>/<i>AKT1</i>/<i>PTEN</i>-altered tumors (n = 28), median PFS was 9.3 months with capivasertib plus paclitaxel and 3.7 months with placebo plus paclitaxel (HR, 0.30; 95% CI, 0.11 to 0.79; 2-sided <i>P</i> = .01). The most common grade ≥ 3 adverse events in those treated with capivasertib plus paclitaxel versus placebo plus paclitaxel, respectively, were diarrhea (13% <i>v</i> 1%), infection (4% <i>v</i> 1%), neutropenia (3% <i>v</i> 3%), rash (4% <i>v</i> 0%), and fatigue (4% <i>v</i> 0%).<h4>Conclusion</h4>Addition of the AKT inhibitor capivasertib to first-line paclitaxel therapy for TNBC resulted in significantly longer PFS and OS. Benefits were more pronounced in patients with <i>PIK3CA</i>/<i>AKT1</i>/<i>PTEN</i>-altered tumors. Capivasertib warrants further investigation for treatment of TNBC.

Wang, K. Li, H. Kwong, W.J. Antman, E.M. Ruff, C.T. Giugliano, R.P. Cohen, D.J. Magnuson, E.A. ENGAGE AF‐TIMI 48 Trial Investigators, (2017) Impact of Spontaneous Extracranial Bleeding Events on Health State Utility in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation: Results from the ENGAGE AF-TIMI 48 Trial.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>The impact of different types of extracranial bleeding events on health-related quality of life and health-state utility among patients with atrial fibrillation is not well understood.<h4>Methods and results</h4>The ENGAGE AF-TIMI 48 (Effective Anticoagulation With Factor Xa Next Generation in Atrial Fibrillation-Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction 48) Trial compared edoxaban with warfarin with respect to the prevention of stroke or systemic embolism in atrial fibrillation. Data from the EuroQol-5D (EQ-5D-3L) questionnaire, prospectively collected at 3-month intervals for up to 48 months, were used to estimate the impact of different categories of bleeding events on health-state utility over 12 months following the event. Longitudinal mixed-effect models revealed that major gastrointestinal bleeds and major nongastrointestinal bleeds were associated with significant immediate decreases in utility scores (-0.029 [-0.044 to -0.014; <i>P</i><0.001] and -0.029 [-0.046 to -0.012; <i>P</i>=0.001], respectively). These effects decreased in magnitude over time, and were no longer significant for major nongastrointestinal bleeds at 9 months, but remained borderline significant for major gastrointestinal bleeds at 12 months. Clinically relevant nonmajor and minor bleeds were associated with smaller but measurable immediate impacts on utility (-0.010 [-0.016 to -0.005] and -0.016 [-0.024 to -0.008]; <i>P</i><0.001 for both), which remained relatively constant and statistically significant over the 12 months following the bleeding event.<h4>Conclusions</h4>All categories of bleeding events were associated with negative impacts on health-state utility in patients with atrial fibrillation. Major bleeds were associated with relatively large immediate decreases in utility scores that gradually diminished over 12 months; clinically relevant nonmajor and minor bleeds were associated with smaller immediate decreases in utility that persisted over 12 months.<h4>Clinical trial registration</h4>URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/. Unique identifier: NCT00781391.

Pascual, J. Turner, N.C (2019) Targeting the PI3-kinase pathway in triple-negative breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is characterised by poor outcomes and a historical lack of targeted therapies. Dysregulation of signalling through the phosphoinositide 3 (PI3)-kinase and AKT signalling pathway is one of the most frequent oncogenic aberrations of TNBC. Although mutations in individual genes occur relatively rarely, combined activating mutations in PIK3CA and AKT1, with inactivating mutations in phosphatase and tensin homologue, occur in ∼25%‒30% of advanced TNBC. Recent randomised trials suggest improved progression-free survival (PFS) with AKT-inhibitors in combination with first-line chemotherapy for patients with TNBC and pathway genetic aberrations. We review the evidence for PI3K pathway activation in TNBC, and clinical trial data for PI3K, AKT and mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors in TNBC. We discuss uncertainty over defining which cancers have pathway activation and the future overlap between immunotherapy and pathway targeting.

Turner, N.C. Alarcón, E. Armstrong, A.C. Philco, M. López Chuken, Y.A. Sablin, M.-.P. Tamura, K. Gómez Villanueva, A. Pérez-Fidalgo, J.A. Cheung, S.Y.A. Corcoran, C. Cullberg, M. Davies, B.R. de Bruin, E.C. Foxley, A. Lindemann, J.P.O. Maudsley, R. Moschetta, M. Outhwaite, E. Pass, M. Rugman, P. Schiavon, G. Oliveira, M (2019) BEECH: a dose-finding run-in followed by a randomised phase II study assessing the efficacy of AKT inhibitor capivasertib (AZD5363) combined with paclitaxel in patients with estrogen receptor-positive advanced or metastatic breast cancer, and in a PIK3CA mutant sub-population.. Show Abstract full text

BACKGROUND:BEECH investigated the efficacy of capivasertib (AZD5363), an oral inhibitor of AKT isoforms 1-3, in combination with the first-line weekly paclitaxel for advanced or metastatic estrogen receptor-positive (ER+)/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HER2-) breast cancer, and in a phosphoinositide 3-kinase, catalytic, alpha polypeptide mutation sub-population (PIK3CA+). PATIENTS AND METHODS:BEECH consisted of an open-label, phase Ib safety run-in (part A) in 38 patients with advanced breast cancer, and a randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind, phase II expansion (part B) in 110 women with ER+/HER2- metastatic breast cancer. In part A, patients received paclitaxel 90mg/m2 (days 1, 8 and 15 of a 28-day cycle) with capivasertib taken twice daily (b.i.d.) at two intermittent ascending dosing schedules. In part B, patients were randomly assigned, stratified by PIK3CA mutation status, to receive paclitaxel with either capivasertib or placebo. The primary end point for part A was safety to recommend a dose and schedule for part B; primary end points for part B were progression-free survival (PFS) in the overall and PIK3CA+ sub-population. RESULTS:Capivasertib was well tolerated, with a 400mg b.i.d. 4days on/3days off treatment schedule selected in part A. In part B, median PFS in the overall population was 10.9months with capivasertib versus 8.4months with placebo [hazard ratio (HR) 0.80; P=0.308]. In the PIK3CA+ sub-population, median PFS was 10.9months with capivasertib versus 10.8months with placebo (HR 1.11; P=0.760). Based on the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Event v4.0, the most common grade ≥3 adverse events in the capivasertib group were diarrhoea, hyperglycaemia, neutropoenia and maculopapular rash. Dose intensity of paclitaxel was similar in both groups. CONCLUSIONS:Capivasertib had no apparent impact on the tolerability and dose intensity of paclitaxel. Adding capivasertib to weekly paclitaxel did not prolong PFS in the overall population or PIK3CA+ sub-population of ER+/HER2- advanced/metastatic breast cancer patients. ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01625286.

Gris-Oliver, A. Palafox, M. Monserrat, L. Brasó-Maristany, F. Òdena, A. Sánchez-Guixé, M. Ibrahim, Y.H. Villacampa, G. Grueso, J. Parés, M. Guzmán, M. Rodríguez, O. Bruna, A. Hirst, C.S. Barnicle, A. de Bruin, E.C. Reddy, A. Schiavon, G. Arribas, J. Mills, G.B. Caldas, C. Dienstmann, R. Prat, A. Nuciforo, P. Razavi, P. Scaltriti, M. Turner, N.C. Saura, C. Davies, B.R. Oliveira, M. Serra, V (2020) Genetic Alterations in the PI3K/AKT Pathway and Baseline AKT Activity Define AKT Inhibitor Sensitivity in Breast Cancer Patient-derived Xenografts.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>AZD5363/capivasertib is a pan-AKT catalytic inhibitor with promising activity in combination with paclitaxel in triple-negative metastatic breast cancer harboring PI3K/AKT-pathway alterations and in estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer in combination with fulvestrant. Here, we aimed to identify response biomarkers and uncover mechanisms of resistance to AZD5363 and its combination with paclitaxel.<h4>Experimental design</h4>Genetic and proteomic markers were analyzed in 28 HER2-negative patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) and in patient samples, and correlated to AZD5363 sensitivity as single agent and in combination with paclitaxel.<h4>Results</h4>Four PDX were derived from patients receiving AZD5363 in the clinic which exhibited concordant treatment response. Mutations in <i>PIK3CA</i>/<i>AKT1</i> and absence of mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1)-activating alterations, for example, in <i>MTOR</i> or <i>TSC1</i>, were associated with sensitivity to AZD5363 monotherapy. Interestingly, excluding <i>PTEN</i> from the composite biomarker increased its accuracy from 64% to 89%. Moreover, resistant PDXs exhibited low baseline pAKT S473 and residual pS6 S235 upon treatment, suggesting that parallel pathways bypass AKT/S6K1 signaling in these models. We identified two mechanisms of acquired resistance to AZD5363: cyclin D1 overexpression and loss of <i>AKT1</i> p.E17K.<h4>Conclusions</h4>This study provides insight into putative predictive biomarkers of response and acquired resistance to AZD5363 in HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer.

Spring, L.M. Wander, S.A. Andre, F. Moy, B. Turner, N.C. Bardia, A (2020) Cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6 inhibitors for hormone receptor-positive breast cancer: past, present, and future.. Show Abstract full text

The development and approval of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 4 and 6 inhibitors for hormone receptor-positive and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative metastatic breast cancer represents a major milestone in cancer therapeutics. Three different oral CDK4/6 inhibitors, palbociclib, ribociclib, and abemaciclib, have significantly improved progression-free survival by a number of months when combined with endocrine therapy. More recently, improvement in overall survival has been reported with ribociclib and abemaciclib. The toxicity profile of all three drugs is well described and generally easily manageable with dose reductions when indicated. More myelotoxicity is observed with palbociclib and ribociclib, but more gastrointestinal toxicity is observed with abemaciclib. Emerging data is shedding light on the resistance mechanisms associated with CDK4/6 inhibitors, including cell cycle alterations and activation of upstream tyrosine kinase receptors. A number of clinical trials are exploring several important questions regarding treatment sequencing, combinatorial strategies, and the use of CDK4/6 inhibitors in the adjuvant and neoadjuvant settings, thereby further expanding and refining the clinical application of CDK4/6 inhibitors for patients with breast cancer.

Lee, J.Y. Cutts, R.J. White, I. Augustin, Y. Garcia-Murillas, I. Fenwick, K. Matthews, N. Turner, N.C. Harrington, K. Gilbert, D.C. Bhide, S (2020) Next Generation Sequencing Assay for Detection of Circulating HPV DNA (cHPV-DNA) in Patients Undergoing Radical (Chemo)Radiotherapy in Anal Squamous Cell Carcinoma (ASCC).. Show Abstract full text

<b>Background:</b> Following chemo-radiotherapy (CRT) for human papilloma virus positive (HPV+) anal squamous cell carcinoma (ASCC), detection of residual/recurrent disease is challenging. Patients frequently undergo unnecessary repeated biopsies for abnormal MRI/clinical findings. In a pilot study we assessed the role of circulating HPV-DNA in identifying "true" residual disease. <b>Methods:</b> We prospectively collected plasma samples at baseline (<i>n</i> = 21) and 12 weeks post-CRT (<i>n</i> = 17). Circulating HPV-DNA (cHPV DNA) was measured using a novel next generation sequencing (NGS) assay, panHPV-detect, comprising of two primer pools covering distinct regions of eight high-risk HPV genomes (16, 18, 31, 33, 35, 45, 52, and 58) to detect circulating HPV-DNA (cHPV DNA). cHPV-DNA levels post-CRT were correlated to disease response. <b>Results:</b> In pre-CRT samples, panHPV-detect demonstrated 100% sensitivity and specificity for HPV associated ASCC. PanHPV-detect was able to demonstrate cHPV-DNA in 100% (9/9) patients with T1/T2N0 cancers. cHPV-DNA was detectable 12 weeks post CRT in just 2/17 patients, both of whom relapsed. 1/16 patients who had a clinical complete response (CR) at 3 months post-CRT but relapsed at 9 months and 1/1 patient with a partial response (PR). PanHPV-detect demonstrated 100% sensitivity and specificity in predicting response to CRT. <b>Conclusion:</b> We demonstrate that panHPV-detect, an NSG assay is a highly sensitive and specific test for the identification of cHPV-DNA in plasma at diagnosis. cHPV-DNA post-treatment may predict clinical response to CRT.

Chopra, N. Tovey, H. Pearson, A. Cutts, R. Toms, C. Proszek, P. Hubank, M. Dowsett, M. Dodson, A. Daley, F. Kriplani, D. Gevensleben, H. Davies, H.R. Degasperi, A. Roylance, R. Chan, S. Tutt, A. Skene, A. Evans, A. Bliss, J.M. Nik-Zainal, S. Turner, N.C (2020) Homologous recombination DNA repair deficiency and PARP inhibition activity in primary triple negative breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) encompasses molecularly different subgroups, with a subgroup harboring evidence of defective homologous recombination (HR) DNA repair. Here, within a phase 2 window clinical trial, RIO trial (EudraCT 2014-003319-12), we investigate the activity of PARP inhibitors in 43 patients with untreated TNBC. The primary end point, decreased Ki67, occured in 12% of TNBC. In secondary end point analyses, HR deficiency was identified in 69% of TNBC with the mutational-signature-based HRDetect assay. Cancers with HRDetect mutational signatures of HR deficiency had a functional defect in HR, assessed by impaired RAD51 foci formation on end of treatment biopsy. Following rucaparib treatment there was no association of Ki67 change with HR deficiency. In contrast, early circulating tumor DNA dynamics identified activity of rucaparib, with end of treatment ctDNA levels suppressed by rucaparib in mutation-signature HR-deficient cancers. In ad hoc analysis, rucaparib induced expression of interferon response genes in HR-deficient cancers. The majority of TNBCs have a defect in DNA repair, identifiable by mutational signature analysis, that may be targetable with PARP inhibitors.

Yap, T.A. Kristeleit, R. Michalarea, V. Pettitt, S.J. Lim, J.S.J. Carreira, S. Roda, D. Miller, R. Riisnaes, R. Miranda, S. Figueiredo, I. Rodrigues, D.N. Ward, S. Matthews, R. Parmar, M. Turner, A. Tunariu, N. Chopra, N. Gevensleben, H. Turner, N.C. Ruddle, R. Raynaud, F.I. Decordova, S. Swales, K.E. Finneran, L. Hall, E. Rugman, P. Lindemann, J.P.O. Foxley, A. Lord, C.J. Banerji, U. Plummer, R. Basu, B. Lopez, J.S. Drew, Y. de Bono, J.S (2020) Phase I Trial of the PARP Inhibitor Olaparib and AKT Inhibitor Capivasertib in Patients with <i>BRCA1/2</i>- and Non-<i>BRCA1/2</i>-Mutant Cancers.. Show Abstract full text

Preclinical studies have demonstrated synergy between PARP and PI3K/AKT pathway inhibitors in <i>BRCA1</i> and <i>BRCA2</i> (<i>BRCA1/2)</i>-deficient and <i>BRCA1/2</i>-proficient tumors. We conducted an investigator-initiated phase I trial utilizing a prospective intrapatient dose- escalation design to assess two schedules of capivasertib (AKT inhibitor) with olaparib (PARP inhibitor) in 64 patients with advanced solid tumors. Dose expansions enrolled germline <i>BRCA1/2</i>-mutant tumors, or <i>BRCA1/2</i> wild-type cancers harboring somatic DNA damage response (DDR) or PI3K-AKT pathway alterations. The combination was well tolerated. Recommended phase II doses for the two schedules were: olaparib 300 mg twice a day with either capivasertib 400 mg twice a day 4 days on, 3 days off, or capivasertib 640 mg twice a day 2 days on, 5 days off. Pharmacokinetics were dose proportional. Pharmacodynamic studies confirmed phosphorylated (p) GSK3β suppression, increased pERK, and decreased BRCA1 expression. Twenty-five (44.6%) of 56 evaluable patients achieved clinical benefit (RECIST complete response/partial response or stable disease ≥ 4 months), including patients with tumors harboring germline <i>BRCA1/2</i> mutations and <i>BRCA1/2</i> wild-type cancers with or without DDR and PI3K-AKT pathway alterations. SIGNIFICANCE: In the first trial to combine PARP and AKT inhibitors, a prospective intrapatient dose- escalation design demonstrated safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic activity and assessed predictive biomarkers of response/resistance. Antitumor activity was observed in patients harboring tumors with germline <i>BRCA1/2</i> mutations and <i>BRCA1/2</i> wild-type cancers with or without somatic DDR and/or PI3K-AKT pathway alterations.<i>This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1426</i>.

Turner, N.C. Swift, C. Kilburn, L. Fribbens, C. Beaney, M. Garcia-Murillas, I. Budzar, A.U. Robertson, J.F.R. Gradishar, W. Piccart, M. Schiavon, G. Bliss, J.M. Dowsett, M. Johnston, S.R.D. Chia, S.K (2020) <i>ESR1</i> Mutations and Overall Survival on Fulvestrant versus Exemestane in Advanced Hormone Receptor-Positive Breast Cancer: A Combined Analysis of the Phase III SoFEA and EFECT Trials.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4><i>ESR1</i> mutations are acquired frequently in hormone receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer after prior aromatase inhibitors. We assessed the clinical utility of baseline <i>ESR1</i> circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis in the two phase III randomized trials of fulvestrant versus exemestane.<h4>Experimental design</h4>The phase III EFECT and SoFEA trials randomized patients with hormone receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer who had progressed on prior nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor therapy, between fulvestrant 250 mg and exemestane. Baseline serum samples from 227 patients in EFECT, and baseline plasma from 161 patients in SoFEA, were analyzed for <i>ESR1</i> mutations by digital PCR. The primary objectives were to assess the impact of <i>ESR1</i> mutation status on progression-free (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in a combined analysis of both studies.<h4>Results</h4><i>ESR1</i> mutations were detected in 30% (151/383) baseline samples. In patients with <i>ESR1</i> mutation detected, PFS was 2.4 months [95% confidence interval (CI), 2.0-2.6] on exemestane and 3.9 months (95% CI, 3.0-6.0) on fulvestrant [hazard ratio (HR), 0.59; 95% CI, 0.39-0.89; <i>P</i> = 0.01). In patients without <i>ESR1</i> mutations detected, PFS was 4.8 months (95% CI, 3.7-6.2) on exemestane and 4.1 months (95% CI, 3.6-5.5) on fulvestrant (HR, 1.05; 95% CI, 0.81-1.37; <i>P</i> = 0.69). There was an interaction between <i>ESR1</i> mutation and treatment (<i>P</i> = 0.02). Patients with <i>ESR1</i> mutation detected had 1-year OS of 62% (95% CI, 45%-75%) on exemestane and 80% (95% CI, 68%-87%) on fulvestrant (<i>P</i> = 0.04; restricted mean survival analysis). Patients without <i>ESR1</i> mutations detected had 1-year OS of 79% (95% CI, 71%-85%) on exemestane and 81% (95% CI, 74%-87%) on fulvestrant (<i>P</i> = 0.69).<h4>Conclusions</h4>Detection of <i>ESR1</i> mutations in baseline ctDNA is associated with inferior PFS and OS in patients treated with exemestane versus fulvestrant.

Babina, I.S. Turner, N.C (2017) Advances and challenges in targeting FGFR signalling in cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) and their receptors (FGFRs) regulate numerous cellular processes. Deregulation of FGFR signalling is observed in a subset of many cancers, making activated FGFRs a highly promising potential therapeutic target supported by multiple preclinical studies. However, early-phase clinical trials have produced mixed results with FGFR-targeted cancer therapies, revealing substantial complexity to targeting aberrant FGFR signalling. In this Review, we discuss the increasing understanding of the differences between diverse mechanisms of oncogenic activation of FGFR, and the factors that determine response and resistance to FGFR targeting.

Smyth, E.C. Babina, I.S. Turner, N.C (2017) Gatekeeper Mutations and Intratumoral Heterogeneity in FGFR2-Translocated Cholangiocarcinoma.. Show Abstract full text

FGFR2 genetic translocations are frequent in cholangiocarcinoma, yet despite initial sensitivity to FGFR inhibitors in clinic, patients quickly become resistant to targeted therapies. The work published by Goyal and colleagues demonstrates that acquisition of gatekeeper mutations in FGFR2 and intratumoral heterogeneity drive resistance in patients with FGFR2-translocated intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma, which will have important implications for management of the disease in clinic. Cancer Discov; 7(3); 248-9. ©2017 AACR.See related article by Goyal et al., p. 252.

O'Leary, B. Finn, R.S. Turner, N.C (2016) Treating cancer with selective CDK4/6 inhibitors.. Show Abstract full text

Uncontrolled cellular proliferation, mediated by dysregulation of the cell-cycle machinery and activation of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) to promote cell-cycle progression, lies at the heart of cancer as a pathological process. Clinical implementation of first-generation, nonselective CDK inhibitors, designed to inhibit this proliferation, was originally hampered by the high risk of toxicity and lack of efficacy noted with these agents. The emergence of a new generation of selective CDK4/6 inhibitors, including ribociclib, abemaciclib and palbociclib, has enabled tumour types in which CDK4/6 has a pivotal role in the G1-to-S-phase cell-cycle transition to be targeted with improved effectiveness, and fewer adverse effects. Results of pivotal phase III trials investigating palbociclib in patients with advanced-stage oestrogen receptor (ER)-positive breast cancer have demonstrated a substantial improvement in progression-free survival, with a well-tolerated toxicity profile. Mechanisms of acquired resistance to CDK4/6 inhibitors are beginning to emerge that, although unwelcome, might enable rational post-CDK4/6 inhibitor therapeutic strategies to be identified. Extending the use of CDK4/6 inhibitors beyond ER-positive breast cancer is challenging, and will likely require biomarkers that are predictive of a response, and the use of combination therapies in order to optimize CDK4/6 targeting.

Graeser, M.K. Gevensleben, H. Smith, I.E. Ashworth, A. Turner, N.C (2011) Determination of HER2 Status with Analysis of Plasma DNA by Digital PCR in Patients with Metastatic Breast Cancer.. full text
Turner, N. Sharpe, R. Johnson, D. Pearson, A. Ashworth, A (2010) FGFR Signalling Drives the Growth of Triple Negative and Basal-Like Breast Cancer Cell Lines Both In Vitro and In Vivo.
ter Brugge, P. van der Burg, E. Kristel, P. Boon, U. Majewski, I. Moutinho, C. Esteller, M. Hogervorst, F. Gevensleben, H. Turner, N. Kloosterman, W. Lips, E. Wesseling, J (2013) Genomic rearrangements and promoter demethylation drive therapy resistance in patient-derived xenograft models of BRCA1-deficient breast cancer. full text
Asghar, U. Witkiewicz, A.K. Turner, N.C. Knudsen, E.S (2015) The history and future of targeting cyclin-dependent kinases in cancer therapy.. Show Abstract full text

Cancer represents a pathological manifestation of uncontrolled cell division; therefore, it has long been anticipated that our understanding of the basic principles of cell cycle control would result in effective cancer therapies. In particular, cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) that promote transition through the cell cycle were expected to be key therapeutic targets because many tumorigenic events ultimately drive proliferation by impinging on CDK4 or CDK6 complexes in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Moreover, perturbations in chromosomal stability and aspects of S phase and G2/M control mediated by CDK2 and CDK1 are pivotal tumorigenic events. Translating this knowledge into successful clinical development of CDK inhibitors has historically been challenging, and numerous CDK inhibitors have demonstrated disappointing results in clinical trials. Here, we review the biology of CDKs, the rationale for therapeutically targeting discrete kinase complexes and historical clinical results of CDK inhibitors. We also discuss how CDK inhibitors with high selectivity (particularly for both CDK4 and CDK6), in combination with patient stratification, have resulted in more substantial clinical activity.

Yeo, B. Turner, N.C. Jones, A (2014) An update on the medical management of breast cancer.. full text
Turner, N.C. Reis-Filho, J.S (2013) Tackling the diversity of triple-negative breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) comprises a highly diverse collection of cancers. Here, we review this diversity both in terms of gene expression subtypes and the repertoire of genetic events. Transcriptomic analyses of TNBC have revealed at least six subtypes, with the luminal androgen receptor (luminal AR) or molecular apocrine cancers forming a distinct group within triple-negative disease. Distinct from the gene expression subtypes, a diverse set of genetic events have been described in TNBC, with a number of potentially targetable genetic events found although all at relatively low frequency. Clinical trials to define the clinical utility of therapies targeting these low-frequency events will require substantial screening efforts to identify sufficient patients. Set against the diversity of TNBC, clinical studies of patients with triple-negative disease will need to be either focused on molecularly defined subsets with upfront molecular stratification, or powered for a secondary endpoint analysis of a molecularly defined subset. Such approaches will be crucial to realize the potential of precision medicine for patients with TNBCs.

Anandappa, G. Turner, N.C (2013) Targeting receptor tyrosine kinases in HER2-negative breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The targeting of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) has been a major area for breast cancer therapy, exemplified by the targeting of HER2-amplified breast cancer. RECENT FINDINGS: We review the data on the activation of RTKs in HER2-negative breast cancer, and discuss the clinical translational challenge of identifying cancers that are reliant on a specific kinase for growth and survival. Substantial evidence suggests that subsets of breast cancer may be reliant on specific kinases, and that this could be exploited therapeutically. The heterogeneity of breast cancer, however, and the potential for adaptive switching between RTKs after inhibition of a single RTK, present challenges to targeting individual RTKs in the clinic SUMMARY: Targeting of RTKs in HER2-negative breast cancer presents a major therapeutic opportunity in breast cancer, although robust selection strategies will be required to identify cancers with activation of specific RTKs if this potential is to be realized.

Turner, N. Amlot, P. Platts, A. Jones, A. Buscombe, J (2004) Type-1 histiocytosis response to 90Y-lanreotide.. full text
Turner, N.C. Tutt, A.N.J (2012) Platinum chemotherapy for BRCA1-related breast cancer: do we need more evidence?. Show Abstract full text

A recent prospective clinical trial provides further evidence that breast cancers arising in germline BRCA1 mutation carriers are highly sensitive to cisplatin chemotherapy. The potential significance of these data for the management of patients with BRCA1-related and BRCA2-related breast cancer is discussed.

Jain, V.K. Turner, N.C (2012) Challenges and opportunities in the targeting of fibroblast growth factor receptors in breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Activation of the fibroblast growth factor receptor pathway is a common event in many cancer types. Here we review the role of fibroblast growth factor receptor signalling in breast cancer, from SNPs in FGFR2 that influence breast cancer risk and SNPs in FGFR4 that associate with breast cancer prognosis, and potential therapeutic targets such as receptor amplification and aberrant autocrine and paracrine ligand expression. We discuss the multiple therapeutic strategies in preclinical and clinical development and the current and future challenges to successfully targeting this pathway in cancer.

Turner, N.C. Reis-Filho, J.S (2012) Genetic heterogeneity and cancer drug resistance.. Show Abstract full text

Despite the success of targeted therapies in the treatment of cancer, the development of resistance limits the ability to translate this method into a curative treatment. The mechanisms of resistance have traditionally been thought of as intrinsic (ie, present at baseline) or acquired (ie, developed after initial response). Recent evidence has challenged the notion of acquired resistance. Although cancers are traditionally thought to be clonal, there is now evidence of intra-tumour genetic heterogeneity in most cancers. The clinical pattern of acquired resistance in many circumstances represents outgrowth of resistant clones that might have originally been present in the primary cancer at low frequency but that have expanded under the selective pressure imposed by targeted therapies. Here, we describe the potential role of clonal heterogeneity in resistance to targeted therapy, discuss genetic instability as one of its causes, and detail approaches to tackle intra-tumour heterogeneity in the clinic.

Turner, N.C. Dusheiko, G. Jones, A (2003) Hepatitis C and B-cell lymphoma.. Show Abstract full text

The association between the hepatitis C virus and B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas is controversial. We review the epidemiological evidence behind the association, and look at the reasons behind the variation in study findings. There is increasing evidence of the pathogenesis of hepatitis C-associated lymphoma. Treatment of the hepatitis C virus with antiviral therapy may lead to the regression of some low-grade lymphomas. The management of other hepatitis C-associated lymphomas is similar to that of conventional lymphoma, although viral reactivation and subsequent immune reconstitution hepatitis can complicate chemotherapy.

Harbeck, N. Iyer, S. Turner, N. Cristofanilli, M. Ro, J. André, F. Loi, S. Verma, S. Iwata, H. Bhattacharyya, H. Puyana Theall, K. Bartlett, C.H. Loibl, S (2016) Quality of life with palbociclib plus fulvestrant in previously treated hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer: patient-reported outcomes from the PALOMA-3 trial.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>In the PALOMA-3 study, palbociclib plus fulvestrant demonstrated improved progression-free survival compared with fulvestrant plus placebo in hormone receptor-positive, HER2- endocrine-resistant metastatic breast cancer (MBC). This analysis compared patient-reported outcomes (PROs) between the two treatment groups.<h4>Patients and methods</h4>Patients were randomized 2 : 1 to receive palbociclib 125 mg/day orally for 3 weeks followed by 1 week off (n = 347) plus fulvestrant (500 mg i.m. per standard of care) or placebo plus fulvestrant (n = 174). PROs were assessed on day 1 of cycles 1-4 and of every other subsequent cycle starting with cycle 6 using the EORTC QLQ-C30 and its breast cancer module, QLQ-BR23. High scores (range 0-100) could indicate better functioning/quality of life (QoL) or worse symptom severity. Repeated-measures mixed-effect analyses were carried out to compare on-treatment overall scores and changes from baseline between treatment groups while controlling for baseline. Between-group comparisons of time to deterioration in global QoL and pain were made using an unstratified log-rank test and Cox proportional hazards model.<h4>Results</h4>Questionnaire completion rates were high at baseline and during treatment (from baseline to cycle 14, ≥95.8% in each group completed ≥1 question on the EORTC QLQ-C30). On treatment, estimated overall global QoL scores significantly favored the palbociclib plus fulvestrant group [66.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) 64.5-67.7 versus 63.0, 95% CI 60.6-65.3; P = 0.0313]. Significantly greater improvement from baseline in pain was also observed in this group (-3.3, 95% CI -5.1 to -1.5 versus 2.0, 95% CI -0.6 to 4.6; P = 0.0011). No significant differences were observed for other QLQ-BR23 functioning domains, breast or arm symptoms. Treatment with palbociclib plus fulvestrant significantly delayed deterioration in global QoL (P < 0.025) and pain (P < 0.001) compared with fulvestrant alone.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Palbociclib plus fulvestrant allowed patients to maintain good QoL in the endocrine resistance setting while experiencing substantially delayed disease progression.<h4>Clinical trial registration</h4>NCT01942135.

Turner, N.C. Huang Bartlett, C. Cristofanilli, M (2015) Palbociclib in Hormone-Receptor-Positive Advanced Breast Cancer..
Turner, N.C. Strauss, S.J. Sarker, D. Gillmore, R. Kirkwood, A. Hackshaw, A. Papadopoulou, A. Bell, J. Kayani, I. Toumpanakis, C. Grillo, F. Mayer, A. Hochhauser, D. Begent, R.H. Caplin, M.E. Meyer, T (2010) Chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil, cisplatin and streptozocin for neuroendocrine tumours.. Show Abstract full text

BACKGROUND: The role of chemotherapy for neuroendocrine tumours remains controversial and there is no standard regimen. METHOD: We report the outcome for a consecutive series of chemonaive patients with metastatic or locally advanced neuroendocrine tumours treated with a combination of 5-fluorouracil (500 mg m(-2)), cisplatin (70 mg m(-2)) and streptozocin (1000 mg m(-2)) (FCiSt) administered three weekly for up to six cycles. Patients were assessed for radiological response, toxicity and survival. RESULTS: In the 79 patients assessable for response, treatment with FCiSt was associated with an overall response rate of 33% (38% for pancreatic primary sites and 25% for non-pancreatic primary sites). Stable disease occurred in a further 51%, with progression in 16%. The median time to progression was 9.1 months and median overall survival was 31.5 months. The most common grade 3-4 toxicity was neutropaenia (28% patients) but grade 3-4 infection was rare (7%). The most frequent non-haematological grade 3-4 toxicity was nausea and vomiting (17%). Prognostic factors included Ki-67, mitotic index, grade and chromogranin A, whereas response to chemotherapy was predicted by mitotic index, grade and alpha-fetoprotein. CONCLUSIONS: FCiSt is an effective regimen for neuroendocrine tumours with an acceptable toxicity profile. Grade and mitotic index are the best predictors of response.

Chopra, N. Turner, N.C (2017) Targeting PIK3CA-mutant advanced breast cancer in the clinical setting..
Turner, N.C. Ro, J. André, F. Loi, S. Verma, S. Iwata, H. Harbeck, N. Loibl, S. Huang Bartlett, C. Zhang, K. Giorgetti, C. Randolph, S. Koehler, M. Cristofanilli, M. PALOMA3 Study Group, (2015) Palbociclib in Hormone-Receptor-Positive Advanced Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Growth of hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer is dependent on cyclin-dependent kinases 4 and 6 (CDK4 and CDK6), which promote progression from the G1 phase to the S phase of the cell cycle. We assessed the efficacy of palbociclib (an inhibitor of CDK4 and CDK6) and fulvestrant in advanced breast cancer.<h4>Methods</h4>This phase 3 study involved 521 patients with advanced hormone-receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative breast cancer that had relapsed or progressed during prior endocrine therapy. We randomly assigned patients in a 2:1 ratio to receive palbociclib and fulvestrant or placebo and fulvestrant. Premenopausal or perimenopausal women also received goserelin. The primary end point was investigator-assessed progression-free survival. Secondary end points included overall survival, objective response, rate of clinical benefit, patient-reported outcomes, and safety. A preplanned interim analysis was performed by an independent data and safety monitoring committee after 195 events of disease progression or death had occurred.<h4>Results</h4>The median progression-free survival was 9.2 months (95% confidence interval [CI], 7.5 to not estimable) with palbociclib-fulvestrant and 3.8 months (95% CI, 3.5 to 5.5) with placebo-fulvestrant (hazard ratio for disease progression or death, 0.42; 95% CI, 0.32 to 0.56; P<0.001). The most common grade 3 or 4 adverse events in the palbociclib-fulvestrant group were neutropenia (62.0%, vs. 0.6% in the placebo-fulvestrant group), leukopenia (25.2% vs. 0.6%), anemia (2.6% vs. 1.7%), thrombocytopenia (2.3% vs. 0%), and fatigue (2.0% vs. 1.2%). Febrile neutropenia was reported in 0.6% of palbociclib-treated patients and 0.6% of placebo-treated patients. The rate of discontinuation due to adverse events was 2.6% with palbociclib and 1.7% with placebo.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Among patients with hormone-receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer who had progression of disease during prior endocrine therapy, palbociclib combined with fulvestrant resulted in longer progression-free survival than fulvestrant alone. (Funded by Pfizer; PALOMA3 ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01942135.).

McCabe, D.J.H. Turner, N.C. Chao, D. Leff, A. Gregson, N.A. Womersley, H.J. Mak, I. Perkin, G.D. Schapira, A.H.V (2004) Paraneoplastic "stiff person syndrome" with metastatic adenocarcinoma and anti-Ri antibodies.. Show Abstract full text

A 43-year-old woman presented with clinical and electrophysiologic features of stiff person syndrome (SPS), without abdominal or lumbar paraspinal muscle involvement. Investigations revealed metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung with positive anti-Ri antibodies. Her clinical condition improved with diazepam, baclofen, tizanidine, and palliative chemotherapy. Screening for an underlying malignancy and anti-Ri antibodies should be considered in patients with SPS when clinical presentation is atypical.

Turner, N.C. Neven, P. Loibl, S. Andre, F (2017) Advances in the treatment of advanced oestrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Oestrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer is the most common subtype of breast cancer. Endocrine therapies that target the dependence of this subtype on the oestrogen receptor have substantial activity, yet the development of resistance to therapy is inevitable in advanced cancer. Major progress has been made in identifying the drivers of oestrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer and the mechanisms of resistance to endocrine therapy. This progress has translated into major advances in the treatment of advanced breast cancer, with several targeted therapies that enhance the efficacy of endocrine therapy; inhibitors of mTOR and inhibitors of the cyclin-dependent kinases CDK4 and CDK6 substantially improve progression-free survival. A new wave of targeted therapies is being developed, including inhibitors of PI3K, AKT, and HER2, and a new generation of oestrogen-receptor degraders. Considerable challenges remain in patient selection, deciding on the most appropriate order in which to administer therapies, and establishing whether cross-resistance occurs between therapies.

Turner, N. Andre, F. Loibl, S. Ro, J. Iwata, H. Harbeck, N. Glueck, S. Verma, S. Loi, S. Bartlett, C.H. Thiele, A. Zhang, K. Koehler, M. Cristofanilli, M (2013) Phase 3, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of fulvestrant with or without PD-0332991 (palbociclib) +/- goserelin in women with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer (MBC) whose disease progressed after prior endocrine therapy.
Cristofanilli, M. DeMichele, A. Giorgetti, C. Turner, N.C. Slamon, D.J. Im, S.-.A. Masuda, N. Verma, S. Loi, S. Colleoni, M. Theall, K.P. Huang, X. Liu, Y. Bartlett, C.H (2018) Predictors of prolonged benefit from palbociclib plus fulvestrant in women with endocrine-resistant hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative metastatic breast cancer in PALOMA-3.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>The addition of palbociclib to fulvestrant improved clinical outcomes over placebo-fulvestrant in endocrine-pretreated metastatic breast cancer (MBC) patients in PALOMA-3. Here, we examined factors predictive of long-term benefit.<h4>Methods</h4>Premenopausal-peri/postmenopausal patients with endocrine-resistant, hormone receptor-positive (HR+)/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative MBC were randomised 2:1 to fulvestrant (500 mg) and either palbociclib (125 mg/d; 3/1 schedule; n = 347) or placebo (n = 174). Baseline characteristics, mutation status and HR expression levels were compared in patients with and without prolonged benefit (treatment duration ≥18 months).<h4>Results</h4>By August 2016, 100 patients (29%) on palbociclib-fulvestrant and 26 (15%) on placebo-fulvestrant demonstrated prolonged benefit, with long-term responders in both arms sharing common clinical characteristics. They usually had less disease burden at baseline versus those treated <18 months, such as having one disease site (40% vs 29% on palbociclib-fulvestrant and 69% vs 29% on placebo-fulvestrant), bone-only disease (32% vs 22% and 46% vs 17%) and were less heavily pretreated (69% vs 56% and 73% vs 60% had ≤2 prior therapies). Baseline tumour ESR1 and PIK3CA mutation rates were lower among long-term responders in both arms; median oestrogen receptor H-scores were similar, whereas progesterone receptor H-scores were higher among long-term responders.<h4>Conclusions</h4>This exploratory analysis demonstrates that some patients with endocrine-resistant MBC derive significant and prolonged benefit when treated with palbociclib-fulvestrant, with fewer patients experiencing similar efficacy with placebo-fulvestrant. The current analysis did not identify specific molecular or clinical factors prognostic of long-term benefit with palbociclib-fulvestrant (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01942135).

Rugo, H.S. Turner, N.C. Finn, R.S. Joy, A.A. Verma, S. Harbeck, N. Masuda, N. Im, S.-.A. Huang, X. Kim, S. Sun, W. Iyer, S. Schnell, P. Bartlett, C.H. Johnston, S (2018) Palbociclib plus endocrine therapy in older women with HR+/HER2- advanced breast cancer: a pooled analysis of randomised PALOMA clinical studies.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Aim</h4>Because incidence of breast cancer and comorbidities increase with age, it is important to determine treatment benefit in elderly patients. We evaluated outcomes with palbociclib plus endocrine therapy in patients aged ≥65 years.<h4>Methods</h4>Data were pooled from three randomised studies (NCT00721409, NCT01740427 and NCT01942135) of women with HR+/HER2- advanced breast cancer (ABC). In PALOMA-1 (open-label) and PALOMA-2 (double-blind, placebo-controlled), treatment-naïve patients received palbociclib plus letrozole or letrozole alone. In PALOMA-3 (double-blind, placebo-controlled), patients with endocrine-resistant disease received palbociclib plus fulvestrant or fulvestrant alone.<h4>Results</h4>Among 528 patients treated with palbociclib plus letrozole and 347 treated with palbociclib plus fulvestrant, 218 (41.3%) and 86 (24.8%), respectively, were aged ≥65 years. Versus endocrine therapy alone, median progression-free survival was significantly improved in patients aged 65-74 years (hazard ratio [HR], 0.66; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.45-0.97; P = 0.016) and ≥75 years (HR, 0.31; 95% CI, 0.16-0.61; P<0.001) receiving palbociclib plus letrozole and in patients aged 65-74 years (HR, 0.27; 95% CI, 0.16-0.48; P<0.001) receiving palbociclib plus fulvestrant; few patients aged ≥75 years received palbociclib plus fulvestrant (HR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.19-1.8; P = 0.18). Patient-reported functioning and quality of life was maintained. No clinically relevant differences in palbociclib exposure were observed between age groups. Although myelosuppression was more common among patients aged ≥75 years, incidence of grade ≥III myelosuppression was similar across age groups, and febrile neutropenia was uncommon (≤2.4%); no new safety concerns were identified in older patients.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Palbociclib plus endocrine therapy is an effective, well-tolerated treatment for older patients with ABC.

Verma, S. Bartlett, C.H. Schnell, P. DeMichele, A.M. Loi, S. Ro, J. Colleoni, M. Iwata, H. Harbeck, N. Cristofanilli, M. Zhang, K. Thiele, A. Turner, N.C. Rugo, H.S (2016) Palbociclib in Combination With Fulvestrant in Women With Hormone Receptor-Positive/HER2-Negative Advanced Metastatic Breast Cancer: Detailed Safety Analysis From a Multicenter, Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Phase III Study (PALOMA-3).. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Palbociclib enhances endocrine therapy and improves clinical outcomes in hormone receptor (HR)-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative metastatic breast cancer (MBC). Because this is a new target, it is clinically important to understand palbociclib's safety profile to effectively manage toxicity and optimize clinical benefit.<h4>Materials and methods</h4>Patients with endocrine-resistant, HR-positive/HER2-negative MBC (n = 521) were randomly assigned 2:1 to receive fulvestrant (500 mg intramuscular injection) with or without goserelin with oral palbociclib (125 mg daily; 3 weeks on/1 week off) or placebo. Safety assessments at baseline and day 1 of each cycle included blood counts on day 15 for the first 2 cycles. Hematologic toxicity was assessed by using laboratory data.<h4>Results</h4>A total of 517 patients were treated (palbociclib, n = 345; placebo, n = 172); median follow-up was 8.9 months. With palbociclib, neutropenia was the most common grade 3 (55%) and 4 (10%) adverse event; median times to onset and duration of grade ≥3 episodes were 16 and 7 days, respectively. Asian ethnicity and below-median neutrophil counts at baseline were significantly associated with an increased chance of developing grade 3-4 neutropenia with palbociclib. Dose modifications for grade 3-4 neutropenia had no adverse effect on progression-free survival. In the palbociclib arm, febrile neutropenia occurred in 3 (<1%) patients. The percentage of grade 1-2 infections was higher than in the placebo arm. Grade 1 stomatitis occurred in 8% of patients.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Palbociclib plus fulvestrant treatment was well-tolerated, and the primary toxicity of asymptomatic neutropenia was effectively managed by dose modification without apparent loss of efficacy. This study appears at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01942135.<h4>Implications for practice</h4>Treatment with palbociclib in combination with fulvestrant was generally safe and well-tolerated in patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive metastatic breast cancer. Consistent with the drug's proposed mechanism of action, palbociclib-related neutropenia differs in its clinical time course, patterns, and consequences from those seen with chemotherapy. Neutropenia can be effectively managed by a dose reduction, interruption, or cycle delay without compromising efficacy. A significant efficacy gain and a favorable safety profile support the consideration of incorporating palbociclib into the routine management of HR-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative metastatic breast cancer.

André, F. Bachelot, T. Campone, M. Dalenc, F. Perez-Garcia, J.M. Hurvitz, S.A. Turner, N. Rugo, H. Smith, J.W. Deudon, S. Shi, M. Zhang, Y. Kay, A. Porta, D.G. Yovine, A. Baselga, J (2013) Targeting FGFR with dovitinib (TKI258): preclinical and clinical data in breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

PURPOSE: Fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) and FGFR2 amplifications are observed in approximately 10% of breast cancers and are related to poor outcomes. We evaluated whether dovitinib (TKI258), an inhibitor of FGFR1, FGFR2, and FGFR3, presented antitumor activity in FGFR-amplified breast cancers. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Preclinical activity of dovitinib was evaluated in both breast cancer cell lines and an FGFR1-amplified xenograft model (HBCx2). Dovitinib was then evaluated in a phase II trial that included 4 groups of patients with human EGF receptor 2-negative metastatic breast cancer on the basis of FGFR1 amplification and hormone receptor (HR) status. FGFR1 amplification was assessed by silver in situ hybridization. Preplanned retrospective analyses assessed predictive value of FGFR1, FGFR2, and FGF3 amplifications by quantitative PCR (qPCR). RESULTS: Dovitinib monotherapy inhibits proliferation in FGFR1- and FGFR2-amplified, but not FGFR-normal, breast cancer cell lines. Dovitinib also inhibits tumor growth in FGFR1-amplified breast cancer xenografts. Eighty-one patients were enrolled in the trial. Unconfirmed response or stable disease for more than 6 months was observed in 5 (25%) and 1 (3%) patient(s) with FGFR1-amplified/HR-positive and FGFR1-nonamplified/HR-positive breast cancer. When qPCR-identified amplifications in FGFR1, FGFR2, or FGF3 were grouped to define an FGF pathway-amplified breast cancer in HR-positive patients, the mean reduction in target lesions was 21.1% compared with a 12.0% increase in patients who did not present with FGF pathway-amplified breast cancer. CONCLUSION: Dovitinib showed antitumor activity in FGFR-amplified breast cancer cell lines and may have activity in breast cancers with FGF pathway amplification.

Fotiadis, N. De Paepe, K.N. Bonne, L. Khan, N. Riddell, A. Turner, N. Starling, N. Gerlinger, M. Rao, S. Chau, I. Cunningham, D. Koh, D.-.M (2020) Comparison of a coaxial versus non-coaxial liver biopsy technique in an oncological setting: diagnostic yield, complications and seeding risk.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Objectives</h4>Percutaneous liver biopsy (PLB) poses specific challenges in oncological patients such as bleeding and tumour seeding. This study's aim was to compare a coaxial (C-PLB) and non-coaxial (NC-PLB) biopsy technique in terms of diagnostic yield, safety and seeding risk of image-guided PLB techniques in an oncological setting.<h4>Methods</h4>Local research committee approval was obtained for this single-site retrospective study. Patients who underwent a PLB between November 2011 and December 2017 were consecutively included. Medical records were reviewed to determine diagnostic yield and complications. Follow-up imaging was re-reviewed for seeding, defined as visible tumour deposits along the PLB track. Mann-Whitney U and chi-squared tests were performed to investigate differences between biopsy techniques in sample number, complications and seeding rate.<h4>Results</h4>In total, 741 patients (62 ± 13 years, 378 women) underwent 932 PLB (C-PLB 72.9% (679/932); NC-PLB 27.1% (253/932)). More tissue cores (p < 0.001) were obtained with C-PLB (median 4 cores; range 1-12) compared with NC-PLB (2 cores; range 1-4) and diagnostic yield was similar for both techniques (C-PLB 92.6% (629/679); NC-PLB 92.5% (234/253); p = 0.940). Complication rate (9.3%; 87/932) using C-PLB (8.2% (56/679)) was lower compared with NC-PLB (12.3% (31/253); p = 0.024). Major complications were uncommon (C-PLB 2.7% (18/679); NC-PLB 2.8% (7/253)); bleeding developed in 1.2% (11/932; C-PLB 1.2% (8/679); NC-PLB 1.2% (3/253)). Seeding was a rare event, occurring significantly less in C-PLB cases (C-PLB 1.3% (7/544); NC-PLB 3.1% (6/197); p = 0.021).<h4>Conclusions</h4>C-PLB allows for high diagnostic tissue yield with a lower complication and seeding rate than a NC-PLB and should be the preferred method in an oncological setting.<h4>Key points</h4>• A coaxial percutaneous liver biopsy achieves a significant higher number of cores and fewer complications than a non-coaxial biopsy technique. • The risk of tumour seeding is very low and is significantly lower using the coaxial biopsy technique. • In this study, a larger number of cores (median = 4) could be safely acquired using the coaxial technique, providing sufficient material for advanced molecular analysis.

Battisti, N.M.L. Rogerson, F. Lee, K. Shepherd, S. Mohammed, K. Turner, N. McGrath, S. Okines, A. Parton, M. Johnston, S. Allen, M. Ring, A (2020) Safety and efficacy of T-DM1 in patients with advanced HER2-positive breast cancer The Royal Marsden experience.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Ado-trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) is standard of care for patients with advanced HER2+ breast cancer who relapse within 6 months of adjuvant trastuzumab or progress on first-line anti-HER2 therapy. We evaluated its safety and efficacy in our real-world population.<h4>Methods</h4>We identified patients on T-DM1 from 01/01/2014 to 12/03/2018 from our electronic records. Patients', tumour characteristics, safety and efficacy outcomes were recorded. Chi-squared/Fishers exact test and Kaplan-Meier methods were utilised.<h4>Results</h4>128 patients receiving T-DM1 were included in the analysis with a median age of 55 years (26-85). 89.8% of patients had ECOG PS 0-1 and 21.1% had presented with de novo metastatic disease. 57.8% had ER-positive disease and 38.3% central nervous system involvement. 88.3% of patients had received trastuzumab for advanced disease (with pertuzumab in 28.9%) and 11.7% had only received trastuzumab in the adjuvant setting. Grade ≥3 adverse events occurred in 35.9% of patients. These were liver toxicity (19.5%), anaemia (6.2%) and thrombocytopenia (4.7%). Peripheral neuropathy of any grade was reported in 21.9% of cases, bleeding in 9.4% and ejection fraction decline in 5 patients. Median progression-free survival was 8.7 months and overall survival 20.4 months. Prior pertuzumab did not influence survival outcomes.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The safety of T-DM1 in our population is similar to available literature, although we observed higher rates of peripheral neuropathy and deranged liver function. These findings are relevant for the potential role of TDM-1 in the curative setting.

Finn, R.S. Cristofanilli, M. Ettl, J. Gelmon, K.A. Colleoni, M. Giorgetti, C. Gauthier, E. Liu, Y. Lu, D.R. Zhang, Z. Bartlett, C.H. Slamon, D.J. Turner, N.C. Rugo, H.S (2020) Treatment effect of palbociclib plus endocrine therapy by prognostic and intrinsic subtype and biomarker analysis in patients with bone-only disease: a joint analysis of PALOMA-2 and PALOMA-3 clinical trials.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>This analysis evaluated the relationship between treatment-free interval (TFI, in PALOMA-2)/disease-free interval (DFI, in PALOMA-3) and progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS, in PALOMA-3), treatment effect in patients with bone-only disease, and whether intrinsic subtype affects PFS in patients receiving palbociclib.<h4>Methods</h4>Data were from phase 3, randomized PALOMA-2 and PALOMA-3 clinical studies of hormone receptor‒positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2‒negative (HR+ /HER2-) advanced breast cancer (ABC) patients receiving endocrine therapy plus palbociclib or placebo. Subpopulation treatment effect pattern plot (STEPP) analysis evaluated the association between DFI and PFS and OS. PFS by luminal subtype and cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 4/6 or endocrine pathway gene expression levels were evaluated in patients with bone-only disease; median PFS and OS were estimated by the Kaplan-Meier method.<h4>Results</h4>Median durations of TFI were 37.1 and 30.9 months (PALOMA-2) and DFI were 49.2 and 52.0 months (PALOMA-3) in the palbociclib and placebo groups, respectively. Among the PALOMA-2 biomarker population (n = 454), 23% had bone-only disease; median PFS was longer with palbociclib versus placebo (31.3 vs 11.2 months; hazard ratio, 0.41; 95% CI 0.25‒0.69). The interaction effect of bone-only versus visceral disease subgroups on median PFS with palbociclib was not significant (P = 0.262). Among the PALOMA-3 biomarker population (n = 302), 27% had bone-only disease. STEPP analyses showed that palbociclib PFS benefit was not affected by DFI, and that palbociclib OS effect may be smaller in patients with short DFIs. Among patients who provided metastatic tumor tissues (n = 142), regardless of luminal A (hazard ratio, 0.23; 95% CI 0.11‒0.47; P = 0.0000158) or luminal B (hazard ratio, 0.26; 95% CI 0.12‒0.56; P = 0.000269) subtype, palbociclib improved PFS versus placebo.<h4>Conclusions</h4>These findings support palbociclib plus endocrine therapy as standard of care for HR+ /HER2- ABC patients, regardless of baseline TFI/DFI or intrinsic molecular subtype, including patients with bone-only disease.<h4>Trial registration</h4>Pfizer (clinicaltrials.gov:NCT01740427, NCT01942135).

Turner, N.C. Kingston, B. Kilburn, L.S. Kernaghan, S. Wardley, A.M. Macpherson, I.R. Baird, R.D. Roylance, R. Stephens, P. Oikonomidou, O. Braybrooke, J.P. Tuthill, M. Abraham, J. Winter, M.C. Bye, H. Hubank, M. Gevensleben, H. Cutts, R. Snowdon, C. Rea, D. Cameron, D. Shaaban, A. Randle, K. Martin, S. Wilkinson, K. Moretti, L. Bliss, J.M. Ring, A (2020) Circulating tumour DNA analysis to direct therapy in advanced breast cancer (plasmaMATCH): a multicentre, multicohort, phase 2a, platform trial.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) testing might provide a current assessment of the genomic profile of advanced cancer, without the need to repeat tumour biopsy. We aimed to assess the accuracy of ctDNA testing in advanced breast cancer and the ability of ctDNA testing to select patients for mutation-directed therapy.<h4>Methods</h4>We did an open-label, multicohort, phase 2a, platform trial of ctDNA testing in 18 UK hospitals. Participants were women (aged ≥18 years) with histologically confirmed advanced breast cancer and an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status 0-2. Patients had completed at least one previous line of treatment for advanced breast cancer or relapsed within 12 months of neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy. Patients were recruited into four parallel treatment cohorts matched to mutations identified in ctDNA: cohort A comprised patients with ESR1 mutations (treated with intramuscular extended-dose fulvestrant 500 mg); cohort B comprised patients with HER2 mutations (treated with oral neratinib 240 mg, and if oestrogen receptor-positive with intramuscular standard-dose fulvestrant); cohort C comprised patients with AKT1 mutations and oestrogen receptor-positive cancer (treated with oral capivasertib 400 mg plus intramuscular standard-dose fulvestrant); and cohort D comprised patients with AKT1 mutations and oestrogen receptor-negative cancer or PTEN mutation (treated with oral capivasertib 480 mg). Each cohort had a primary endpoint of confirmed objective response rate. For cohort A, 13 or more responses among 78 evaluable patients were required to infer activity and three or more among 16 were required for cohorts B, C, and D. Recruitment to all cohorts is complete and long-term follow-up is ongoing. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03182634; the European Clinical Trials database, EudraCT2015-003735-36; and the ISRCTN registry, ISRCTN16945804.<h4>Findings</h4>Between Dec 21, 2016, and April 26, 2019, 1051 patients registered for the study, with ctDNA results available for 1034 patients. Agreement between ctDNA digital PCR and targeted sequencing was 96-99% (n=800, kappa 0·89-0·93). Sensitivity of digital PCR ctDNA testing for mutations identified in tissue sequencing was 93% (95% CI 83-98) overall and 98% (87-100) with contemporaneous biopsies. In all cohorts, combined median follow-up was 14·4 months (IQR 7·0-23·7). Cohorts B and C met or exceeded the target number of responses, with five (25% [95% CI 9-49]) of 20 patients in cohort B and four (22% [6-48]) of 18 patients in cohort C having a response. Cohorts A and D did not reach the target number of responses, with six (8% [95% CI 3-17]) of 74 in cohort A and two (11% [1-33]) of 19 patients in cohort D having a response. The most common grade 3-4 adverse events were raised gamma-glutamyltransferase (13 [16%] of 80 patients; cohort A); diarrhoea (four [25%] of 20; cohort B); fatigue (four [22%] of 18; cohort C); and rash (five [26%] of 19; cohort D). 17 serious adverse reactions occurred in 11 patients, and there was one treatment-related death caused by grade 4 dyspnoea (in cohort C).<h4>Interpretation</h4>ctDNA testing offers accurate, rapid genotyping that enables the selection of mutation-directed therapies for patients with breast cancer, with sufficient clinical validity for adoption into routine clinical practice. Our results demonstrate clinically relevant activity of targeted therapies against rare HER2 and AKT1 mutations, confirming these mutations could be targetable for breast cancer treatment.<h4>Funding</h4>Cancer Research UK, AstraZeneca, and Puma Biotechnology.

Keraite, I. Alvarez-Garcia, V. Garcia-Murillas, I. Beaney, M. Turner, N.C. Bartos, C. Oikonomidou, O. Kersaudy-Kerhoas, M. Leslie, N.R (2020) PIK3CA mutation enrichment and quantitation from blood and tissue.. Show Abstract full text

PIK3CA is one of the two most frequently mutated genes in breast cancers, occurring in 30-40% of cases. Four frequent 'hotspot' PIK3CA mutations (E542K, E545K, H1047R and H1047L) account for 80-90% of all PIK3CA mutations in human malignancies and represent predictive biomarkers. Here we describe a PIK3CA mutation specific nuclease-based enrichment assay, which combined with a low-cost real-time qPCR detection method, enhances assay detection sensitivity from 5% for E542K and 10% for E545K to 0.6%, and from 5% for H1047R to 0.3%. Moreover, we present a novel flexible prediction method to calculate initial mutant allele frequency in tissue biopsy and blood samples with low mutant fraction. These advancements demonstrated a quick, accurate and simple detection and quantitation of PIK3CA mutations in two breast cancer cohorts (first cohort n = 22, second cohort n = 25). Hence this simple, versatile and informative workflow could be applicable for routine diagnostic testing where quantitative results are essential, e.g. disease monitoring subject to validation in a substantial future study.

Pascual, J. Lim, J.S.J. Macpherson, I.R. Armstrong, A.C. Ring, A. Okines, A.F.C. Cutts, R.J. Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Garcia-Murillas, I. Pearson, A. Hrebien, S. Gevensleben, H. Proszek, P.Z. Hubank, M. Hills, M. King, J. Parmar, M. Prout, T. Finneran, L. Malia, J. Swales, K.E. Ruddle, R. Raynaud, F.I. Turner, A. Hall, E. Yap, T.A. Lopez, J.S. Turner, N.C (2021) Triplet Therapy with Palbociclib, Taselisib, and Fulvestrant in <i>PIK3CA</i>-Mutant Breast Cancer and Doublet Palbociclib and Taselisib in Pathway-Mutant Solid Cancers.. Show Abstract full text

Cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 (CDK4/6) and PI3K inhibitors synergize in <i>PIK3CA</i>-mutant ER-positive HER2-negative breast cancer models. We conducted a phase Ib trial investigating the safety and efficacy of doublet CDK4/6 inhibitor palbociclib plus selective PI3K inhibitor taselisib in advanced solid tumors, and triplet palbociclib plus taselisib plus fulvestrant in 25 patients with <i>PIK3CA</i>-mutant, ER-positive HER2-negative advanced breast cancer. The triplet therapy response rate in <i>PIK3CA-</i>mutant, ER-positive HER2-negative cancer was 37.5% [95% confidence interval (CI), 18.8-59.4]. Durable disease control was observed in <i>PIK3CA</i>-mutant ER-negative breast cancer and other solid tumors with doublet therapy. Both combinations were well tolerated at pharmacodynamically active doses. In the triplet group, high baseline cyclin E1 expression associated with shorter progression-free survival (PFS; HR = 4.2; 95% CI, 1.3-13.1; <i>P</i> = 0.02). Early circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) dynamics demonstrated high on-treatment ctDNA association with shorter PFS (HR = 5.2; 95% CI, 1.4-19.4; <i>P</i> = 0.04). Longitudinal plasma ctDNA sequencing provided genomic evolution evidence during triplet therapy. SIGNIFICANCE: The triplet of palbociclib, taselisib, and fulvestrant has promising efficacy in patients with heavily pretreated <i>PIK3CA</i>-mutant ER-positive HER2-negative advanced breast cancer. A subset of patients with <i>PIK3CA</i>-mutant triple-negative breast cancer derived clinical benefit from palbociclib and taselisib doublet, suggesting a potential nonchemotherapy targeted approach for this population.<i>This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1</i>.

O'Leary, B. Cutts, R.J. Huang, X. Hrebien, S. Liu, Y. André, F. Loibl, S. Loi, S. Garcia-Murillas, I. Cristofanilli, M. Bartlett, C.H. Turner, N.C (2021) Circulating Tumor DNA Markers for Early Progression on Fulvestrant With or Without Palbociclib in ER+ Advanced Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>There are no established molecular biomarkers for patients with breast cancer receiving combination endocrine and CDK4/6 inhibitor (CDK4/6i). We aimed to determine whether genomic markers in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) can identify patients at higher risk of early progression on fulvestrant therapy with or without palbociclib, a CDK4/6i.<h4>Methods</h4>PALOMA-3 was a phase III, multicenter, double-blind randomized controlled trial of palbociclib plus fulvestrant (n = 347) vs placebo plus fulvestrant (n = 174) in patients with endocrine-pretreated estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer. Pretreatment plasma samples from 459 patients were analyzed for mutations in 17 genes, copy number in 14 genes, and circulating tumor fraction. Progression-free survival (PFS) was compared in patients with circulating tumor fraction above or below a prespecified cutoff of 10% and with or without a specific genomic alteration. All statistical tests were 2-sided.<h4>Results</h4>Patients with high ctDNA fraction had worse PFS on both palbociclib plus fulvestrant (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.62, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.17 to 2.24; P = .004) and placebo plus fulvestrant (HR = 1.77, 95% CI = 1.21 to 2.59; P = .004). In multivariable analysis, high-circulating tumor fraction was associated with worse PFS (HR = 1.20 per 10% increase in tumor fraction, 95% CI = 1.09 to 1.32; P < .001), as was TP53 mutation (HR = 1.84, 95% CI = 1.27 to 2.65; P = .001) and FGFR1 amplification (HR = 2.91, 95% CI = 1.61 to 5.25; P < .001). No interaction with treatment randomization was observed.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Pretreatment ctDNA identified a group of high-risk patients with poor clinical outcome despite the addition of CDK4/6 inhibition. These patients might benefit from inclusion in future trials of escalating treatment, with therapies that may be active in these genomic contexts.

Chawla, S. Turner, N. Terlizzo, M. Heelan, K (2021) Annular atrophic lichen planus induced by anti-HER2 antibodies.. Show Abstract full text

Pertuzumab and trastuzumab are monoclonal antibody inhibitors targeting human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER-2) and are increasingly being utilised in the management of HER2-positive breast cancer, having been demonstrated to improve progression-free survival in conjunction with docetaxel. We present a rare presentation of a lichenoid drug eruption, in an annular atrophic variant, in a 35-year-old woman after initiation of HER2-inhibitor (pertuzumab and trastuzumab) therapy for metastatic breast cancer.

Martin, M. Zielinski, C. Ruiz-Borrego, M. Carrasco, E. Turner, N. Ciruelos, E.M. Muñoz, M. Bermejo, B. Margeli, M. Anton, A. Kahan, Z. Csöszi, T. Casas, M.I. Murillo, L. Morales, S. Alba, E. Gal-Yam, E. Guerrero-Zotano, A. Calvo, L. de la Haba-Rodriguez, J. Ramos, M. Alvarez, I. Garcia-Palomo, A. Huang Bartlett, C. Koehler, M. Caballero, R. Corsaro, M. Huang, X. Garcia-Sáenz, J.A. Chacón, J.I. Swift, C. Thallinger, C. Gil-Gil, M (2021) Palbociclib in combination with endocrine therapy versus capecitabine in hormonal receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor 2-negative, aromatase inhibitor-resistant metastatic breast cancer: a phase III randomised controlled trial-PEARL.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Palbociclib plus endocrine therapy (ET) is the standard treatment of hormone receptor-positive and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative, metastatic breast cancer (MBC). However, its efficacy has not been compared with that of chemotherapy in a phase III trial.<h4>Patients and methods</h4>PEARL is a multicentre, phase III randomised study in which patients with aromatase inhibitor (AI)-resistant MBC were included in two consecutive cohorts. In cohort 1, patients were randomised 1 : 1 to palbociclib plus exemestane or capecitabine. On discovering new evidence about estrogen receptor-1 (ESR1) mutations inducing resistance to AIs, the trial was amended to include cohort 2, in which patients were randomised 1 : 1 between palbociclib plus fulvestrant and capecitabine. The stratification criteria were disease site, prior sensitivity to ET, prior chemotherapy for MBC, and country of origin. Co-primary endpoints were progression-free survival (PFS) in cohort 2 and in wild-type ESR1 patients (cohort 1 + cohort 2). ESR1 hotspot mutations were analysed in baseline circulating tumour DNA.<h4>Results</h4>From March 2014 to July 2018, 296 and 305 patients were included in cohort 1 and cohort 2, respectively. Palbociclib plus ET was not superior to capecitabine in both cohort 2 [median PFS: 7.5 versus 10.0 months; adjusted hazard ratio (aHR): 1.13; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.85-1.50] and wild-type ESR1 patients (median PFS: 8.0 versus 10.6 months; aHR: 1.11; 95% CI: 0.87-1.41). The most frequent grade 3-4 toxicities with palbociclib plus exemestane, palbociclib plus fulvestrant and capecitabine, respectively, were neutropenia (57.4%, 55.7% and 5.5%), hand/foot syndrome (0%, 0% and 23.5%), and diarrhoea (1.3%, 1.3% and 7.6%). Palbociclib plus ET offered better quality of life (aHR for time to deterioration of global health status: 0.67; 95% CI: 0.53-0.85).<h4>Conclusions</h4>There was no statistical superiority of palbociclib plus ET over capecitabine with respect to PFS in MBC patients resistant to AIs. Palbociclib plus ET showed a better safety profile and improved quality of life.

Finn, R.S. Rugo, H.S. Gelmon, K.A. Cristofanilli, M. Colleoni, M. Loi, S. Schnell, P. Lu, D.R. Theall, K.P. Mori, A. Gauthier, E. Bananis, E. Turner, N.C. Diéras, V (2021) Long-Term Pooled Safety Analysis of Palbociclib in Combination with Endocrine Therapy for Hormone Receptor-Positive/Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2-Negative Advanced Breast Cancer: Updated Analysis with up to 5 Years of Follow-Up.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Previous studies demonstrated the tolerability of palbociclib plus endocrine therapy (ET). This analysis evaluated safety based on more recent cutoff dates and a longer palbociclib treatment exposure.<h4>Patients and methods</h4>Data were pooled from three randomized studies of patients with hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HR+/HER2-) advanced breast cancer (ABC), including postmenopausal women who had not received prior systemic treatment for advanced disease (PALOMA-1/-2) and pre- and postmenopausal women who had progressed on prior ET (PALOMA-3).<h4>Results</h4>Updated cutoff dates were December 21, 2017 (PALOMA-1), May 31, 2017 (PALOMA-2), and April 13, 2018 (PALOMA-3). Total person-years of treatment exposure were 1,421.6 with palbociclib plus ET (n = 872) and 528.4 with ET (n = 471). Any-grade neutropenia and infections were more frequent with palbociclib plus ET (82.1% and 59.2%, respectively) than with ET (5.1% and 39.5%). The hazard ratios were 1.6 (p = .0995) for grade 3/4 infections, 1.8 (p = .4358) for grade 3/4 viral infections, 1.4 (p = .0001) for infections, and 30.8 (p < .0001) for neutropenia. Febrile neutropenia was reported in 1.4% of patients receiving palbociclib plus ET. Cumulative incidence of all-grade hematologic adverse events in both arms peaked during the first year of treatment and plateaued over the 5 subsequent years. Interstitial lung disease was reported in 13 patients receiving palbociclib plus ET and 3 receiving ET.<h4>Conclusion</h4>This 5-year, long-term analysis demonstrated that palbociclib plus ET has a consistent and stable safety profile and is a safe treatment for patients with HR+/HER2- ABC.<h4>Implications for practice</h4>Several treatments for patients with breast cancer are associated with long-term or latent adverse events. This long-term, 5-year analysis demonstrated that palbociclib plus endocrine therapy has a consistent and stable safety profile without cumulative or delayed toxicities. These results further support palbociclib plus endocrine therapy as a safe and manageable treatment in clinical practice for patients with hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative advanced breast cancer.

Winer, E.P. Lipatov, O. Im, S.-.A. Goncalves, A. Muñoz-Couselo, E. Lee, K.S. Schmid, P. Tamura, K. Testa, L. Witzel, I. Ohtani, S. Turner, N. Zambelli, S. Harbeck, N. Andre, F. Dent, R. Zhou, X. Karantza, V. Mejia, J. Cortes, J. KEYNOTE-119 investigators, (2021) Pembrolizumab versus investigator-choice chemotherapy for metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (KEYNOTE-119): a randomised, open-label, phase 3 trial.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Pembrolizumab showed durable antitumour activity and manageable safety in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer in the single-arm KEYNOTE-012 and KEYNOTE-086 trials. In this study, we compared pembrolizumab with chemotherapy for second-line or third-line treatment of patients with metastatic triple-negative breast cancer.<h4>Methods</h4>KEYNOTE-119 was a randomised, open-label, phase 3 trial done at 150 medical centres (academic medical centres, community cancer centres, and community hospitals) in 31 countries. Patients aged 18 years or older, with centrally confirmed metastatic triple-negative breast cancer, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0 or 1, who had received one or two previous systemic treatments for metastatic disease, had progression on their most recent therapy, and had previous treatment with an anthracycline or taxane were eligible. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) using a block method (block size of four) and an interactive voice-response system with integrated web-response to receive intravenous pembrolizumab 200 mg once every 3 weeks for 35 cycles (pembrolizumab group), or to single-drug chemotherapy per investigator's choice of capecitabine, eribulin, gemcitabine, or vinorelbine (60% enrolment cap for each; chemotherapy group). Randomisation was stratified by PD-L1 tumour status (positive [combined positive score (CPS) ≥1] vs negative [CPS <1]) and history of previous neoadjuvant or adjuvant treatment versus de-novo metastatic disease at initial diagnosis. Primary endpoints were overall survival in participants with a PD-L1 combined positive score (CPS) of 10 or more, those with a CPS of 1 or more, and all participants; superiority of pembrolizumab versus chemotherapy was tested in all participants only if shown in those with a CPS of one or more. The primary endpoint was analysed in the intention-to-treat population; safety was analysed in the all-subjects-as-treated population. This Article describes the final analysis of the trial, which is now completed. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02555657.<h4>Findings</h4>From Nov 25, 2015, to April 11, 2017, 1098 participants were assessed for eligibility and 622 (57%) were randomly assigned to receive either pembrolizumab (312 [50%]) or chemotherapy (310 [50%]). Median study follow-up was 31·4 months (IQR 27·8-34·4) for the pembrolizumab group and 31·5 months (27·8-34·6) for the chemotherapy group. Median overall survival in patients with a PD-L1 CPS of 10 or more was 12·7 months (95% CI 9·9-16·3) for the pembrolizumab group and 11·6 months (8·3-13·7) for the chemotherapy group (hazard ratio [HR] 0·78 [95% CI 0·57-1·06]; log-rank p=0·057). In participants with a CPS of 1 or more, median overall survival was 10·7 months (9·3-12·5) for the pembrolizumab group and 10·2 months (7·9-12·6) for the chemotherapy group (HR 0·86 [95% CI 0·69-1·06]; log-rank p=0·073). In the overall population, median overall survival was 9·9 months (95% CI 8·3-11·4) for the pembrolizumab group and 10·8 months (9·1-12·6) for the chemotherapy group (HR 0·97 [95% CI 0·82-1·15]). The most common grade 3-4 treatment-related adverse events were anaemia (three [1%] patients in the pembrolizumab group vs ten [3%] in the chemotherapy group), decreased white blood cells (one [<1%] vs 14 [5%]), decreased neutrophil count (one [<1%] vs 29 [10%]), and neutropenia (0 vs 39 [13%]). 61 (20%) patients in the pembrolizumab group and 58 (20%) patients in the chemotherapy group had serious adverse events. Three (<1%) of 601 participants had treatment-related adverse events that led to death (one [<1%] in the pembrolizumab group due to circulatory collapse; two [1%] in the chemotherapy group, one [<1%] due to pancytopenia and sepsis and one [<1%] haemothorax).<h4>Interpretation</h4>Pembrolizumab did not significantly improve overall survival in patients with previously treated metastatic triple-negative breast cancer versus chemotherapy. These findings might inform future research of pembrolizumab monotherapy for selected subpopulations of patients, specifically those with PD-L1-enriched tumours, and inform a combinatorial approach for the treatment of patients with metastatic triple-negative breast cancer.<h4>Funding</h4>Merck Sharp & Dohme.

Rugo, H.S. Lerebours, F. Ciruelos, E. Drullinsky, P. Ruiz-Borrego, M. Neven, P. Park, Y.H. Prat, A. Bachelot, T. Juric, D. Turner, N. Sophos, N. Zarate, J.P. Arce, C. Shen, Y.-.M. Turner, S. Kanakamedala, H. Hsu, W.-.C. Chia, S (2021) Alpelisib plus fulvestrant in PIK3CA-mutated, hormone receptor-positive advanced breast cancer after a CDK4/6 inhibitor (BYLieve): one cohort of a phase 2, multicentre, open-label, non-comparative study.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Alpelisib, a PI3Kα-selective inhibitor and degrader, plus fulvestrant showed efficacy in hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative, PIK3CA-mutated advanced breast cancer in SOLAR-1; limited data are available in the post-cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 inhibitor setting. BYLieve aimed to assess alpelisib plus endocrine therapy in this setting in three cohorts defined by immediate previous treatment; here, we report results from cohort A.<h4>Methods</h4>This ongoing, phase 2, multicentre, open-label, non-comparative study enrolled patients with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative, advanced breast cancer with tumour PIK3CA mutation, following progression on or after previous therapy, including CDK4/6 inhibitors, from 114 study locations (cancer centres, medical centres, university hospitals, and hospitals) in 18 countries worldwide. Participants aged 18 years or older with an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 2 or less, with no more than two previous anticancer treatments and no more than one previous chemotherapy regimen, were enrolled in three cohorts. In cohort A, patients must have had progression on or after a CDK4/6 inhibitor plus an aromatase inhibitor as the immediate previous treatment. Patients received oral alpelisib 300 mg/day (continuously) plus fulvestrant 500 mg intramuscularly on day 1 of each 28-day cycle and on day 15 of cycle 1. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients alive without disease progression at 6 months per local assessment using Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors, version 1.1, in patients with a centrally confirmed PIK3CA mutation. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03056755.<h4>Findings</h4>Between Aug 14, 2017, and Dec 17, 2019 (data cutoff), 127 patients with at least 6 months' follow-up were enrolled into cohort A. 121 patients had a centrally confirmed PIK3CA mutation. At data cutoff, median follow-up was 11·7 months (IQR 8·5-15·9). 61 (50·4%; 95% CI 41·2-59·6) of 121 patients were alive without disease progression at 6 months. The most frequent grade 3 or worse adverse events were hyperglycaemia (36 [28%] of 127 patients), rash (12 [9%]), and rash maculopapular (12 [9%]). Serious adverse events occurred in 33 (26%) of 127 patients. No treatment-related deaths were reported.<h4>Interpretation</h4>BYLieve showed activity of alpelisib plus fulvestrant with manageable toxicity in patients with PIK3CA-mutated, hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer, after progression on a CDK4/6 inhibitor plus an aromatase inhibitor.<h4>Funding</h4>Novartis Pharmaceuticals.

Kingston, B. Cutts, R.J. Bye, H. Beaney, M. Walsh-Crestani, G. Hrebien, S. Swift, C. Kilburn, L.S. Kernaghan, S. Moretti, L. Wilkinson, K. Wardley, A.M. Macpherson, I.R. Baird, R.D. Roylance, R. Reis-Filho, J.S. Hubank, M. Faull, I. Banks, K.C. Lanman, R.B. Garcia-Murillas, I. Bliss, J.M. Ring, A. Turner, N.C (2021) Genomic profile of advanced breast cancer in circulating tumour DNA.. Show Abstract full text

The genomics of advanced breast cancer (ABC) has been described through tumour tissue biopsy sequencing, although these approaches are limited by geographical and temporal heterogeneity. Here we use plasma circulating tumour DNA sequencing to interrogate the genomic profile of ABC in 800 patients in the plasmaMATCH trial. We demonstrate diverse subclonal resistance mutations, including enrichment of HER2 mutations in HER2 positive disease, co-occurring ESR1 and MAP kinase pathway mutations in HR + HER2- disease that associate with poor overall survival (p = 0.0092), and multiple PIK3CA mutations in HR + disease that associate with short progression free survival on fulvestrant (p = 0.0036). The fraction of cancer with a mutation, the clonal dominance of a mutation, varied between genes, and within hotspot mutations of ESR1 and PIK3CA. In ER-positive breast cancer subclonal mutations were enriched in an APOBEC mutational signature, with second hit PIK3CA mutations acquired subclonally and at sites characteristic of APOBEC mutagenesis. This study utilises circulating tumour DNA analysis in a large clinical trial to demonstrate the subclonal diversification of pre-treated advanced breast cancer, identifying distinct mutational processes in advanced ER-positive breast cancer, and novel therapeutic opportunities.

Iwata, H. Umeyama, Y. Liu, Y. Zhang, Z. Schnell, P. Mori, Y. Fletcher, O. Marshall, J.-.C. Johnson, J.G. Wood, L.S. Toi, M. Finn, R.S. Turner, N.C. Bartlett, C.H. Cristofanilli, M (2021) Evaluation of the Association of Polymorphisms With Palbociclib-Induced Neutropenia: Pharmacogenetic Analysis of PALOMA-2/-3.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>The most frequently reported treatment-related adverse event in clinical trials with the cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 (CDK4/6) inhibitor palbociclib is neutropenia. Allelic variants in ABCB1 and ERCC1 might be associated with early occurrence (i.e., end of week 2 treatment) of grade 3/4 neutropenia. Pharmacogenetic analyses were performed to uncover associations between single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in these genes, patient baseline characteristics, and early occurrence of grade 3/4 neutropenia.<h4>Materials and methods</h4>ABCB1 (rs1045642, rs1128503) and ERCC1 (rs3212986, rs11615) were analyzed in germline DNA from palbociclib-treated patients from PALOMA-2 (n = 584) and PALOMA-3 (n = 442). SNP, race, and cycle 1 day 15 (C1D15) absolute neutrophil count (ANC) data were available for 652 patients. Univariate and multivariable analyses evaluated associations between SNPs, patient baseline characteristics, and early occurrence of grade 3/4 neutropenia. Analyses were stratified by Asian (n = 122) and non-Asian (n = 530) ethnicity. Median progression-free survival (mPFS) was estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method. The effect of genetic variants on palbociclib pharmacokinetics was analyzed.<h4>Results</h4>ABCB1 and ERCC1_rs11615 SNP frequencies differed between Asian and non-Asian patients. Multivariable analysis showed that low baseline ANC was a strong independent risk factor for C1D15 grade 3/4 neutropenia regardless of race (Asians: odds ratio [OR], 6.033, 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.615-13.922, p < .0001; Non-Asians: OR, 6.884, 95% CI, 4.138-11.451, p < .0001). ABCB1_rs1128503 (C/C vs. T/T: OR, 0.57, 95% CI, 0.311-1.047, p = .070) and ERCC1_rs11615 (A/A vs. G/G: OR, 1.75, 95% CI, 0.901-3.397, p = .098) were potential independent risk factors for C1D15 grade 3/4 neutropenia in non-Asian patients. Palbociclib mPFS was consistent across genetic variants; exposure was not associated with ABCB1 genotype.<h4>Conclusion</h4>This is the first comprehensive assessment of pharmacogenetic data in relationship to exposure to a CDK4/6 inhibitor. Pharmacogenetic testing may inform about potentially increased likelihood of patients developing severe neutropenia (NCT01740427, NCT01942135).<h4>Implications for practice</h4>Palbociclib plus endocrine therapy improves hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative advanced breast cancer outcomes, but is commonly associated with neutropenia. Genetic variants in ABCB1 may influence palbociclib exposure, and in ERCC1 are associated with chemotherapy-induced severe neutropenia. Here, the associations of single nucleotide polymorphisms in these genes and baseline characteristics with neutropenia were assessed. Low baseline absolute neutrophil count was a strong risk factor (p < .0001) for grade 3/4 neutropenia. There was a trend indicating that ABCB1_rs1128503 and ERCC1_rs11615 were potential risk factors (p < .10) for grade 3/4 neutropenia in non-Asian patients. Pharmacogenetic testing could inform clinicians about the likelihood of severe neutropenia with palbociclib.

Rugo, H.S. Cristofanilli, M. Loibl, S. Harbeck, N. DeMichele, A. Iwata, H. Park, Y.H. Brufsky, A. Theall, K.P. Huang, X. McRoy, L. Bananis, E. Turner, N.C (2021) Prognostic Factors for Overall Survival in Patients with Hormone Receptor-Positive Advanced Breast Cancer: Analyses From PALOMA-3.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>This analysis investigated whether baseline characteristics affect the survival benefit derived from palbociclib-fulvestrant and the optimal timing of cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 inhibitor therapy for advanced breast cancer (ABC) in patients from PALOMA-3.<h4>Patients and methods</h4>In total, 521 patients were randomized 2:1 to receive palbociclib (125 mg/day, 3/1 schedule)-fulvestrant (500 mg, intramuscular injection, on days 1 and 15 of cycle 1, and then day 1 of each subsequent cycle) or matching placebo-fulvestrant. Median overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method.<h4>Results</h4>Multivariable analysis identified endocrine sensitivity, nonvisceral disease, no prior chemotherapy for ABC, and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status (ECOG PS) of 0 as significant prognostic factors for OS. Patients without chemotherapy for ABC had fewer prior lines of treatment in any setting and in the ABC setting versus patients with prior chemotherapy for ABC (two or fewer prior systemic therapies: 69% vs. 42%; no more than one prior line for ABC: 82% vs. 33%, respectively). Median OS was prolonged with palbociclib-fulvestrant in patients without prior chemotherapy for ABC (39.7 vs. 29.5 months; hazard ratio, 0.75; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.56-1.01) and was similar in patients with prior chemotherapy for ABC (25.6 vs. 26.2 months; hazard ratio, 0.91 [95% CI: 0.63-1.32]) versus placebo-fulvestrant.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Prognostic factors for OS included endocrine sensitivity, nonvisceral disease, ECOG PS of 0, and no prior chemotherapy for ABC. Exploratory analyses suggest improved OS with palbociclib-fulvestrant versus placebo-fulvestrant in patients with no prior chemotherapy for ABC, prior endocrine sensitivity, and fewer prior regimens of systemic therapy. (Clinical trial identification number: NCT01942135).<h4>Implications for practice</h4>Prognostic factors for overall survival in HR+/HER2- advanced breast cancer (ABC) include the absence of prior chemotherapy in the advanced setting, endocrine sensitivity, nonvisceral disease, and an ECOG performance status of 0. Improved overall survival benefit was observed with palbociclib-fulvestrant versus placebo-fulvestrant in patients (regardless of menopausal status or visceral involvement) with no prior chemotherapy for ABC, with prior endocrine sensitivity, and fewer prior regimens of systemic therapy. Progression-free survival was prolonged with palbociclib across subgroups (regardless of chemotherapy exposure in ABC). These exploratory findings suggest that patients may receive greater clinical benefit from palbociclib-fulvestrant if they receive the combination before chemotherapy in the advanced setting.

Okines, A.F.C. Kipps, E. Irfan, T. Coakley, M. Angelis, V. Asare, B. Mohammed, K. Walsh, G. Ring, A. Johnston, S.R.D. Parton, M. Turner, N.C. Smith, I.E (2021) Impact of timing of adjuvant chemothapy for early breast cancer: the Royal Marsden Hospital experience.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>The optimal time to deliver adjuvant chemotherapy has not been defined.<h4>Methods</h4>A retrospective study of consecutive patients receiving adjuvant anthracycline and/or taxane 1993-2010. Primary endpoint included 5-year disease-free survival (DFS) in patients commencing chemotherapy <31 versus ≥31 days after surgery. Secondary endpoints included 5-year overall survival (OS) and sub-group analysis by receptor status.<h4>Results</h4>We identified 2003 eligible patients: 1102 commenced chemotherapy <31 days and 901 ≥31 days after surgery. After a median follow-up of 115 months, there was no difference in 5-year DFS rate with chemotherapy <31 compared to ≥31 days after surgery in the overall population (81 versus 82% hazard ratio (HR) 1.15, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.92-1.43, p = 0.230). The 5-year OS rate was similar in patients who received chemotherapy <31 or ≥31 days after surgery (90 versus 91%, (HR 1.21, 95% CI 0.89-1.64, p = 0.228). For 250 patients with triple-negative breast cancer OS was significantly worse in patients who received chemotherapy ≥31 versus <31 days (HR = 2.18, 95% CI 1.11-4.30, p = 0.02).<h4>Discussion</h4>Although adjuvant chemotherapy ≥31 days after surgery did not affect DFS or OS in the whole study population, in TN patients, chemotherapy ≥31 days after surgery significantly reduced 5-year OS; therefore, delays beyond 30 days in this sub-group should be avoided.

Doran, S.J. Kumar, S. Orton, M. d'Arcy, J. Kwaks, F. O'Flynn, E. Ahmed, Z. Downey, K. Dowsett, M. Turner, N. Messiou, C. Koh, D.-.M (2021) "Real-world" radiomics from multi-vendor MRI: an original retrospective study on the prediction of nodal status and disease survival in breast cancer, as an exemplar to promote discussion of the wider issues.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Most MRI radiomics studies to date, even multi-centre ones, have used "pure" datasets deliberately accrued from single-vendor, single-field-strength scanners. This does not reflect aspirations for the ultimate generalisability of AI models. We therefore investigated the development of a radiomics signature from heterogeneous data originating on six different imaging platforms, for a breast cancer exemplar, in order to provide input into future discussions of the viability of radiomics in "real-world" scenarios where image data are not controlled by specific trial protocols but reflective of routine clinical practice.<h4>Methods</h4>One hundred fifty-six patients with pathologically proven breast cancer underwent multi-contrast MRI prior to neoadjuvant chemotherapy and/or surgery. From these, 92 patients were identified for whom T2-weighted, diffusion-weighted and contrast-enhanced T1-weighted sequences were available, as well as key clinicopathological variables. Regions-of-interest were drawn on the above image types and, from these, semantic and calculated radiomics features were derived. Classification models using a variety of methods, both with and without recursive feature elimination, were developed to predict pathological nodal status. Separately, we applied the same methods to analyse the information carried by the radiomic features regarding the originating scanner type and field strength. Repeated, ten-fold cross-validation was employed to verify the results. In parallel work, survival modelling was performed using random survival forests.<h4>Results</h4>Prediction of nodal status yielded mean cross-validated AUC values of 0.735 ± 0.15 (SD) for clinical variables alone, 0.673 ± 0.16 (SD) for radiomic features only, and 0.764 ± 0.16 (SD) for radiomics and clinical features together. Prediction of scanner platform from the radiomics features yielded extremely high values of AUC between 0.91 and 1 for the different classes examined indicating the presence of confounding features for the nodal status classification task. Survival analysis, gave out-of-bag prediction errors of 19.3% (clinical features only), 36.9-51.8% (radiomic features from different combinations of image contrasts), and 26.7-35.6% (clinical plus radiomics features).<h4>Conclusions</h4>Radiomic classification models whose predictive ability was consistent with previous single-vendor, single-field strength studies have been obtained from multi-vendor, multi-field-strength data, despite clear confounding information being present. However, our sample size was too small to obtain useful survival modelling results.

Pasha, N. Turner, N.C (2021) Understanding and overcoming tumor heterogeneity in metastatic breast cancer treatment.. Show Abstract full text

Rational development of targeted therapies has revolutionized metastatic breast cancer outcomes, although resistance to treatment remains a major challenge. Advances in molecular profiling and imaging technologies have provided evidence for the impact of clonal diversity in cancer treatment resistance, through the outgrowth of resistant clones. In this Review, we focus on the genomic processes that drive tumoral heterogeneity and the mechanisms of resistance underlying metastatic breast cancer treatment and discuss implications for future treatment strategies.

Turner, N.C. Balmaña, J. Poncet, C. Goulioti, T. Tryfonidis, K. Honkoop, A.H. Zoppoli, G. Razis, E. Johannsson, O.T. Colleoni, M. Tutt, A.N. Audeh, W. Ignatiadis, M. Mailliez, A. Trédan, O. Musolino, A. Vuylsteke, P. Juan-Fita, M.J. Macpherson, I.R.J. Kaufman, B. Manso, L. Goldstein, L.J. Ellard, S.L. Láng, I. Jen, K.Y. Adam, V. Litière, S. Erban, J. Cameron, D.A. BRAVO Steering Committee and the BRAVO investigators, (2021) Niraparib for Advanced Breast Cancer with Germline <i>BRCA1</i> and <i>BRCA2</i> Mutations: the EORTC 1307-BCG/BIG5-13/TESARO PR-30-50-10-C BRAVO Study.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>To investigate the activity of niraparib in patients with germline-mutated <i>BRCA1/2</i> (g<i>BRCA</i>m) advanced breast cancer.<h4>Patients and methods</h4>BRAVO was a randomized, open-label phase III trial. Eligible patients had g<i>BRCA</i>m and HER2-negative advanced breast cancer previously treated with ≤2 prior lines of chemotherapy for advanced breast cancer or had relapsed within 12 months of adjuvant chemotherapy, and were randomized 2:1 between niraparib and physician's choice chemotherapy (PC; monotherapy with eribulin, capecitabine, vinorelbine, or gemcitabine). Patients with hormone receptor-positive tumors had to have received ≥1 line of endocrine therapy and progressed during this treatment in the metastatic setting or relapsed within 1 year of (neo)adjuvant treatment. The primary endpoint was centrally assessed progression-free survival (PFS). Secondary endpoints included overall survival (OS), PFS by local assessment (local-PFS), objective response rate (ORR), and safety.<h4>Results</h4>After the pre-planned interim analysis, recruitment was halted on the basis of futility, noting a high degree of discordance between local and central PFS assessment in the PC arm that resulted in informative censoring. At the final analysis (median follow-up, 19.9 months), median centrally assessed PFS was 4.1 months in the niraparib arm (<i>n</i> = 141) versus 3.1 months in the PC arm [<i>n</i> = 74; hazard ratio (HR), 0.96; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.65-1.44; <i>P</i> = 0.86]. HRs for OS and local-PFS were 0.95 (95% CI, 0.63-1.42) and 0.65 (95% CI, 0.46-0.93), respectively. ORR was 35% (95% CI, 26-45) with niraparib and 31% (95% CI, 19-46) in the PC arm.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Informative censoring in the control arm prevented accurate assessment of the trial hypothesis, although there was clear evidence of niraparib's activity in this patient population.

Turner, N. Dent, R.A. O'Shaughnessy, J. Kim, S.-.B. Isakoff, S.J. Barrios, C. Saji, S. Bondarenko, I. Nowecki, Z. Lian, Q. Reilly, S.-.J. Hinton, H. Wongchenko, M.J. Kovic, B. Mani, A. Oliveira, M (2022) Ipatasertib plus paclitaxel for PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN-altered hormone receptor-positive HER2-negative advanced breast cancer: primary results from cohort B of the IPATunity130 randomized phase 3 trial.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>PI3K/AKT pathway alterations are frequent in hormone receptor-positive (HR+) breast cancers. IPATunity130 Cohort B investigated ipatasertib-paclitaxel in PI3K pathway-mutant HR+ unresectable locally advanced/metastatic breast cancer (aBC).<h4>Methods</h4>Cohort B of the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 IPATunity130 trial enrolled patients with HR+ HER2-negative PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN-altered measurable aBC who were considered inappropriate for endocrine-based therapy (demonstrated insensitivity to endocrine therapy or visceral crisis) and were candidates for taxane monotherapy. Patients with prior chemotherapy for aBC or relapse < 1 year since (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy were ineligible. Patients were randomized 2:1 to ipatasertib (400 mg, days 1-21) or placebo, plus paclitaxel (80 mg/m<sup>2</sup>, days 1, 8, 15), every 28 days until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. The primary endpoint was investigator-assessed progression-free survival (PFS).<h4>Results</h4>Overall, 146 patients were randomized to ipatasertib-paclitaxel and 76 to placebo-paclitaxel. In both arms, median investigator-assessed PFS was 9.3 months (hazard ratio, 1.00, 95% CI 0.71-1.40) and the objective response rate was 47%. Median paclitaxel duration was 6.9 versus 8.8 months in the ipatasertib-paclitaxel versus placebo-paclitaxel arms, respectively; median ipatasertib/placebo duration was 8.0 versus 9.1 months, respectively. The most common grade ≥ 3 adverse events were diarrhea (12% with ipatasertib-paclitaxel vs 1% with placebo-paclitaxel), neutrophil count decreased (9% vs 7%), neutropenia (8% vs 9%), peripheral neuropathy (7% vs 3%), peripheral sensory neuropathy (3% vs 5%) and hypertension (1% vs 5%).<h4>Conclusion</h4>Adding ipatasertib to paclitaxel did not improve efficacy in PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN-altered HR+ HER2-negative aBC. The ipatasertib-paclitaxel safety profile was consistent with each agent's known adverse effects. Trial registration NCT03337724.

Gennari, A. André, F. Barrios, C.H. Cortés, J. de Azambuja, E. DeMichele, A. Dent, R. Fenlon, D. Gligorov, J. Hurvitz, S.A. Im, S.-.A. Krug, D. Kunz, W.G. Loi, S. Penault-Llorca, F. Ricke, J. Robson, M. Rugo, H.S. Saura, C. Schmid, P. Singer, C.F. Spanic, T. Tolaney, S.M. Turner, N.C. Curigliano, G. Loibl, S. Paluch-Shimon, S. Harbeck, N. ESMO Guidelines Committee. Electronic address: [email protected], (2021) ESMO Clinical Practice Guideline for the diagnosis, staging and treatment of patients with metastatic breast cancer..
Fendler, A. Shepherd, S.T.C. Au, L. Wilkinson, K.A. Wu, M. Byrne, F. Cerrone, M. Schmitt, A.M. Joharatnam-Hogan, N. Shum, B. Tippu, Z. Rzeniewicz, K. Boos, L.A. Harvey, R. Carlyle, E. Edmonds, K. Del Rosario, L. Sarker, S. Lingard, K. Mangwende, M. Holt, L. Ahmod, H. Korteweg, J. Foley, T. Bazin, J. Gordon, W. Barber, T. Emslie-Henry, A. Xie, W. Gerard, C.L. Deng, D. Wall, E.C. Agua-Doce, A. Namjou, S. Caidan, S. Gavrielides, M. MacRae, J.I. Kelly, G. Peat, K. Kelly, D. Murra, A. Kelly, K. O'Flaherty, M. Dowdie, L. Ash, N. Gronthoud, F. Shea, R.L. Gardner, G. Murray, D. Kinnaird, F. Cui, W. Pascual, J. Rodney, S. Mencel, J. Curtis, O. Stephenson, C. Robinson, A. Oza, B. Farag, S. Leslie, I. Rogiers, A. Iyengar, S. Ethell, M. Messiou, C. Cunningham, D. Chau, I. Starling, N. Turner, N. Welsh, L. van As, N. Jones, R.L. Droney, J. Banerjee, S. Tatham, K.C. O'Brien, M. Harrington, K. Bhide, S. Okines, A. Reid, A. Young, K. Furness, A.J.S. Pickering, L. Swanton, C. Crick COVID-19 Consortium, . Gandhi, S. Gamblin, S. Bauer, D.L.V. Kassiotis, G. Kumar, S. Yousaf, N. Jhanji, S. Nicholson, E. Howell, M. Walker, S. Wilkinson, R.J. Larkin, J. Turajlic, S. CAPTURE Consortium, (2021) Adaptive immunity and neutralizing antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern following vaccination in patients with cancer: the CAPTURE study.. Show Abstract full text

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) antiviral response in a pan-tumor immune monitoring (CAPTURE) ( NCT03226886 ) is a prospective cohort study of COVID-19 immunity in patients with cancer. Here we evaluated 585 patients following administration of two doses of BNT162b2 or AZD1222 vaccines, administered 12 weeks apart. Seroconversion rates after two doses were 85% and 59% in patients with solid and hematological malignancies, respectively. A lower proportion of patients had detectable titers of neutralizing antibodies (NAbT) against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants of concern (VOC) versus wild-type (WT) SARS-CoV-2. Patients with hematological malignancies were more likely to have undetectable NAbT and had lower median NAbT than those with solid cancers against both SARS-CoV-2 WT and VOC. By comparison with individuals without cancer, patients with hematological, but not solid, malignancies had reduced neutralizing antibody (NAb) responses. Seroconversion showed poor concordance with NAbT against VOC. Previous SARS-CoV-2 infection boosted the NAb response including against VOC, and anti-CD20 treatment was associated with undetectable NAbT. Vaccine-induced T cell responses were detected in 80% of patients and were comparable between vaccines or cancer types. Our results have implications for the management of patients with cancer during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Dowsett, M. Kilburn, L. Rimawi, M.F. Osborne, C.K. Pogue-Geile, K. Liu, Y. Jacobs, S.A. Finnigan, M. Puhalla, S. Dodson, A. Martins, V. Cheang, M. Perry, S. Holcombe, C. Turner, N. Swift, C. Bliss, J.M. Johnston, S. PALLET trialists, (2022) Biomarkers of Response and Resistance to Palbociclib Plus Letrozole in Patients With ER<sup>+</sup>/HER2<sup>-</sup> Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>To determine (i) the relationship between candidate biomarkers of the antiproliferative (Ki67) response to letrozole and palbociclib alone and combined in ER<sup>+</sup>/HER2<sup>-</sup> breast cancer; and (ii) the pharmacodynamic effect of the agents on the biomarkers.<h4>Experimental design</h4>307 postmenopausal women with ER<sup>+</sup>/HER2<sup>-</sup> primary breast cancer were randomly assigned to neoadjuvant treatment with letrozole for 14 weeks; letrozole for 2 weeks, then letrozole+palbociclib to 14 weeks; palbociclib for 2 weeks, then letrozole+palbociclib to 14 weeks; or letrozole+palbociclib for 14 weeks. Biopsies were taken at baseline, 2 and 14 weeks and surgery at varying times after stopping palbociclib. Immunohistochemical analyses were conducted for Ki67, c-PARP, ER, PgR, RB1, CCNE1, and CCND1.<h4>Results</h4>Higher baselines ER and PgR were significantly associated with a greater chance of complete cell-cycle arrest (CCCA: Ki67 <2.7%) at 14 weeks and higher baseline Ki67, c-PARP, and CCNE1 with a lower chance. The interaction with treatment was significant only for c-PARP. CCND1 levels were decreased c.20% by letrozole at 2 and 14 weeks but showed a tendency to increase with palbociclib. CCNE1 levels fell 82% (median) in tumors showing CCCA but were unchanged in those with no CCCA. Only 2/9 tumors showed CCCA 3-9 days after stopping palbociclib. <i>ESR1</i> mutations were found in 2/4 tumors for which surgery took place ≥6 months after starting treatment.<h4>Conclusions</h4>High CCNE1 levels were confirmed as a biomarker of resistance to letrozole+palbociclib. Ki67 recovery within 3-9 days of discontinuing palbociclib indicates incomplete suppression of proliferation during the "off" week of its schedule.

Snowdon, C. Kernaghan, S. Moretti, L. Turner, N.C. Ring, A. Wilkinson, K. Martin, S. Foster, S. Kilburn, L.S. Bliss, J.M (2022) Operational complexity versus design efficiency: challenges of implementing a phase IIa multiple parallel cohort targeted treatment platform trial in advanced breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Platform trial designs are used increasingly in cancer clinical research and are considered an efficient model for evaluating multiple compounds within a single disease or disease subtype. However, these trial designs can be challenging to operationalise. The use of platform trials in oncology clinical research has increased considerably in recent years as advances in molecular biology enable molecularly defined stratification of patient populations and targeted therapy evaluation. Whereas multiple separate trials may be deemed infeasible, platform designs allow efficient, parallel evaluation of multiple targeted therapies in relatively small biologically defined patient sub-populations with the promise of increased molecular screening efficiency and reduced time for drug evaluation. Whilst the theoretical efficiencies are widely reported, the operational challenges associated with these designs (complexity, cost, regulatory, resource) are not always well understood. MAIN: In this commentary, we describe our practical experience of the implementation and delivery of the UK plasmaMATCH trial, a platform trial in advanced breast cancer, comprising an integrated screening component and multiple parallel downstream mutation-directed therapeutic cohorts. plasmaMATCH reported its primary results within 3 years of opening to recruitment. We reflect on the operational challenges encountered and share lessons learnt to inform the successful conduct of future trials. Key to the success of the plasmaMATCH trial was well co-ordinated stakeholder engagement by an experienced clinical trials unit with expert methodology and trial management expertise, a federated model of clinical leadership, a well-written protocol integrating screening and treatment components and including justification for the chosen structure and intentions for future adaptions, and an integrated funding model with streamlined contractual arrangements across multiple partners. Findings based on our practical experience include the importance of early engagement with the regulators and consideration of a flexible resource infrastructure to allow adequate resource allocation to support concurrent trial activities as adaptions are implemented in parallel to the continued management of patient safety and data quality of the ongoing trial cohorts.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Platform trial designs allow the efficient reporting of multiple treatment cohorts. Operational challenges can be overcome through multidisciplinary engagement, streamlined contracting processes, rationalised protocol and database design and appropriate resourcing.

Martín, M. Zielinski, C. Ruiz-Borrego, M. Carrasco, E. Ciruelos, E.M. Muñoz, M. Bermejo, B. Margelí, M. Csöszi, T. Antón, A. Turner, N. Casas, M.I. Morales, S. Alba, E. Calvo, L. de la Haba-Rodríguez, J. Ramos, M. Murillo, L. Santaballa, A. Alonso-Romero, J.L. Sánchez-Rovira, P. Corsaro, M. Huang, X. Thallinger, C. Kahan, Z. Gil-Gil, M (2022) Overall survival with palbociclib plus endocrine therapy versus capecitabine in postmenopausal patients with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer in the PEARL study.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>An earlier analysis of the PEARL phase III study showed that palbociclib plus endocrine therapy (ET) does not improve progression-free survival (PFS) over capecitabine in aromatase inhibitor-resistant, hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative metastatic breast cancer (MBC) patients. Here, we report the final overall survival (OS) analysis.<h4>Methods</h4>Postmenopausal patients (N = 601) were randomized 1:1 to capecitabine or palbociclib plus ET (exemestane, Cohort 1; fulvestrant, Cohort 2). OS was analysed in Cohort 2, the wild-type ESR1 population and the overall population. Additionally, we analysed subsequent systemic therapies and explored PFS2 (time from randomization to the end of the first subsequent therapy/death).<h4>Results</h4>OS was 31.1 months for palbociclib plus fulvestrant and 32.8 months for capecitabine (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 1.10, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.81-1.50, P = 0.550). In the wild-type ESR1 population, OS was 37.2 months for palbociclib plus ET and 34.8 months for capecitabine (aHR 1.06, 95% CI 0.81-1.37, P = 0.683). In OS analyses, no subgroup showed superiority for palbociclib plus ET over capecitabine. OS in the overall population was 32.6 months for palbociclib plus ET and 30.9 months for capecitabine (P = 0.995). Subsequent systemic therapy was given to 79.8% and 82.9% of patients with palbociclib plus ET and capecitabine, respectively. Median PFS2 was similar between study arms (Cohort 2, P = 0.941; wild-type ESR1 population, P = 0.827). No new safety findings were observed.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Palbociclib plus ET did not show a statistically superior OS compared to capecitabine in MBC patients progressing on aromatase inhibitors.<h4>Trial registration</h4>NCT02028507 (ClinTrials.gov), 2013-003170-27 (EudraCT).

Cristofanilli, M. Rugo, H.S. Im, S.-.A. Slamon, D.J. Harbeck, N. Bondarenko, I. Masuda, N. Colleoni, M. DeMichele, A. Loi, S. Iwata, H. O'Leary, B. André, F. Loibl, S. Bananis, E. Liu, Y. Huang, X. Kim, S. Lechuga Frean, M.J. Turner, N.C (2022) Overall Survival with Palbociclib and Fulvestrant in Women with HR+/HER2- ABC: Updated Exploratory Analyses of PALOMA-3, a Double-blind, Phase III Randomized Study.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>To conduct an updated exploratory analysis of overall survival (OS) with a longer median follow-up of 73.3 months and evaluate the prognostic value of molecular analysis by circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA).<h4>Patients and methods</h4>Patients with hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HR+/HER2-) advanced breast cancer (ABC) were randomized 2:1 to receive palbociclib (125 mg orally/day; 3/1 week schedule) and fulvestrant (500 mg intramuscularly) or placebo and fulvestrant. This OS analysis was performed when 75% of enrolled patients died (393 events in 521 randomized patients). ctDNA analysis was performed among patients who provided consent.<h4>Results</h4>At the data cutoff (August 17, 2020), 258 and 135 deaths occurred in the palbociclib and placebo groups, respectively. The median OS [95% confidence interval (CI)] was 34.8 months (28.8-39.9) in the palbociclib group and 28.0 months (23.5-33.8) in the placebo group (stratified hazard ratio, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.65-0.99). The 6-year OS rate (95% CI) was 19.1% (14.9-23.7) and 12.9% (8.0-19.1) in the palbociclib and placebo groups, respectively. Favorable OS with palbociclib plus fulvestrant compared with placebo plus fulvestrant was observed in most subgroups, particularly in patients with endocrine-sensitive disease, no prior chemotherapy for ABC and low circulating tumor fraction and regardless of ESR1, PIK3CA, or TP53 mutation status. No new safety signals were identified.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The clinically meaningful improvement in OS associated with palbociclib plus fulvestrant was maintained with >6 years of follow-up in patients with HR+/HER2- ABC, supporting palbociclib plus fulvestrant as a standard of care in these patients.

Fitzpatrick, A. Iravani, M. Mills, A. Childs, L. Alaguthurai, T. Clifford, A. Garcia-Murillas, I. Van Laere, S. Dirix, L. Harries, M. Okines, A. Turner, N.C. Haider, S. Tutt, A.N.J. Isacke, C.M (2022) Assessing CSF ctDNA to Improve Diagnostic Accuracy and Therapeutic Monitoring in Breast Cancer Leptomeningeal Metastasis.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cytology is the gold standard diagnostic test for breast cancer leptomeningeal metastasis (BCLM), but has impaired sensitivity, often necessitating repeated lumbar puncture to confirm or refute diagnosis. Further, there is no quantitative response tool to assess response or progression during BCLM treatment.<h4>Experimental design</h4>Facing the challenge of working with small-volume samples and the lack of common recurrent mutations in breast cancers, cell-free DNA was extracted from the CSF and plasma of patients undergoing investigation for BCLM (n = 30). ctDNA fraction was assessed by ultra-low-pass whole genome sequencing (ulpWGS), which does not require prior tumor sequencing.<h4>Results</h4>In this proof-of-concept study, ctDNA was detected (fraction ≥0.10) in the CSF of all 24 patients with BCLM+ (median ctDNA fraction, 0.57), regardless of negative cytology or borderline MRI imaging, whereas CSF ctDNA was not detected in the six patients with BCLM- (median ctDNA fraction 0.03, P < 0.0001). Plasma ctDNA was only detected in patients with extracranial disease progression or who had previously received whole brain radiotherapy. ctDNA fraction was highly concordant with mutant allele fraction measured by tumor mutation-specific ddPCR assays (r = 0.852; P < 0.0001). During intrathecal treatment, serial monitoring (n = 12 patients) showed that suppression of CSF ctDNA fraction was associated with longer BCLM survival (P = 0.034), and rising ctDNA fraction was detectable up to 12 weeks before clinical progression.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Measuring ctDNA fraction by ulpWGS is a quantitative marker demonstrating potential for timely and accurate BCLM diagnosis and therapy response monitoring, with the ultimate aim to improve management of this poor-prognosis patient group.

Okines, A. Irfan, T. Asare, B. Mohammed, K. Osin, P. Nerurkar, A. Smith, I.E. Parton, M. Ring, A. Johnston, S. Turner, N.C (2022) Clinical outcomes in patients with triple negative or HER2 positive lobular breast cancer: a single institution experience.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Invasive lobular carcinomas (ILC) are characterised by loss of the cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin. Approximately 15% of ILC are ER negative at the time of breast cancer diagnosis, or at relapse due to loss of ER expression. Less than 5% of classical ILC but up to 35% of pleomorphic ILC are HER2 positive (HER2+).<h4>Methods</h4>Retrospective analysis of clinic-pathological data from patients with Triple negative (TN) or HER2+ ILC diagnosed 2004-2014 at the Royal Marsden Hospital. The primary endpoint was median overall survival (OS) in patients with metastatic disease. Secondary endpoints included response rate to neo-adjuvant chemotherapy (NAC), median disease-free interval (DFI) and OS for patients with early disease.<h4>Results</h4>Three of 16 patients with early TN ILC and 7/33 with early HER2+ ILC received NAC with pCR rates of 0/3 and 3/5 patients who underwent surgery, respectively. Median DFI was 28.5 months [95% Confidence interval (95%CI) 15-78.8] for TN ILC and not reached (NR) (111.2-NR) for HER2+ early ILC. Five-year OS was 52% (95%CI 23-74%) and 77% (95%CI 58-88%), respectively. Twenty-three patients with advanced TN ILC and 14 patients with advanced HER2+ ILC were identified. Median OS was 18.3 months (95%CI 13.0-32.8 months) and 30.4 months (95%CI 8.8-NR), respectively.<h4>Conclusions</h4>In our institution we report a high relapse rate after treatment for early TN ILC, but median OS from metastatic disease is similar to that expected from TN IDC. Outcomes for patients with advanced HER2+ ILC were less favourable than those expected for IDC, possibly reflecting incomplete exposure to anti-HER2 therapies.<h4>Clinical trial registration</h4>ROLo (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03620643), ROSALINE (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04551495).

Fendler, A. Au, L. Shepherd, S.T.C. Byrne, F. Cerrone, M. Boos, L.A. Rzeniewicz, K. Gordon, W. Shum, B. Gerard, C.L. Ward, B. Xie, W. Schmitt, A.M. Joharatnam-Hogan, N. Cornish, G.H. Pule, M. Mekkaoui, L. Ng, K.W. Carlyle, E. Edmonds, K. Rosario, L.D. Sarker, S. Lingard, K. Mangwende, M. Holt, L. Ahmod, H. Stone, R. Gomes, C. Flynn, H.R. Agua-Doce, A. Hobson, P. Caidan, S. Howell, M. Wu, M. Goldstone, R. Crawford, M. Cubitt, L. Patel, H. Gavrielides, M. Nye, E. Snijders, A.P. MacRae, J.I. Nicod, J. Gronthoud, F. Shea, R.L. Messiou, C. Cunningham, D. Chau, I. Starling, N. Turner, N. Welsh, L. van As, N. Jones, R.L. Droney, J. Banerjee, S. Tatham, K.C. Jhanji, S. O'Brien, M. Curtis, O. Harrington, K. Bhide, S. Bazin, J. Robinson, A. Stephenson, C. Slattery, T. Khan, Y. Tippu, Z. Leslie, I. Gennatas, S. Okines, A. Reid, A. Young, K. Furness, A.J.S. Pickering, L. Gandhi, S. Gamblin, S. Swanton, C. Crick COVID-19 Consortium, . Nicholson, E. Kumar, S. Yousaf, N. Wilkinson, K.A. Swerdlow, A. Harvey, R. Kassiotis, G. Larkin, J. Wilkinson, R.J. Turajlic, S. CAPTURE consortium, (2021) Functional antibody and T cell immunity following SARS-CoV-2 infection, including by variants of concern, in patients with cancer: the CAPTURE study.. Show Abstract full text

Patients with cancer have higher COVID-19 morbidity and mortality. Here we present the prospective CAPTURE study, integrating longitudinal immune profiling with clinical annotation. Of 357 patients with cancer, 118 were SARS-CoV-2 positive, 94 were symptomatic and 2 died of COVID-19. In this cohort, 83% patients had S1-reactive antibodies and 82% had neutralizing antibodies against wild type SARS-CoV-2, whereas neutralizing antibody titers against the Alpha, Beta and Delta variants were substantially reduced. S1-reactive antibody levels decreased in 13% of patients, whereas neutralizing antibody titers remained stable for up to 329 days. Patients also had detectable SARS-CoV-2-specific T cells and CD4<sup>+</sup> responses correlating with S1-reactive antibody levels, although patients with hematological malignancies had impaired immune responses that were disease and treatment specific, but presented compensatory cellular responses, further supported by clinical recovery in all but one patient. Overall, these findings advance the understanding of the nature and duration of the immune response to SARS-CoV-2 in patients with cancer.

Henry, N.L. Somerfield, M.R. Dayao, Z. Elias, A. Kalinsky, K. McShane, L.M. Moy, B. Park, B.H. Shanahan, K.M. Sharma, P. Shatsky, R. Stringer-Reasor, E. Telli, M. Turner, N.C. DeMichele, A (2022) Biomarkers for Systemic Therapy in Metastatic Breast Cancer: ASCO Guideline Update.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>To update the ASCO Biomarkers to Guide Systemic Therapy for Metastatic Breast Cancer (MBC) guideline.<h4>Methods</h4>An Expert Panel conducted a systematic review to identify randomized clinical trials and prospective-retrospective studies from January 2015 to January 2022.<h4>Results</h4>The search identified 19 studies informing the evidence base.<h4>Recommendations</h4>Candidates for a regimen with a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor and hormonal therapy should undergo testing for <i>PIK3CA</i> mutations using next-generation sequencing of tumor tissue or circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in plasma to determine eligibility for alpelisib plus fulvestrant. If no mutation is found in ctDNA, testing in tumor tissue, if available, should be used. Patients who are candidates for poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor therapy should undergo testing for germline <i>BRCA1</i> and <i>BRCA2</i> pathogenic or likely pathogenic mutations to determine eligibility for a PARP inhibitor. There is insufficient evidence for or against testing for a germline <i>PALB2</i> pathogenic variant to determine eligibility for PARP inhibitor therapy in the metastatic setting. Candidates for immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy should undergo testing for expression of programmed cell death ligand-1 in the tumor and immune cells to determine eligibility for treatment with pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy. Candidates for an immune checkpoint inhibitor should also undergo testing for deficient mismatch repair/microsatellite instability-high to determine eligibility for dostarlimab-gxly or pembrolizumab, as well as testing for tumor mutational burden. Clinicians may test for <i>NTRK</i> fusions to determine eligibility for TRK inhibitors. There are insufficient data to recommend routine testing of tumors for <i>ESR1</i> mutations, for homologous recombination deficiency, or for TROP2 expression to guide MBC therapy selection. There are insufficient data to recommend routine use of ctDNA or circulating tumor cells to monitor response to therapy among patients with MBC.Additional information can be found at www.asco.org/breast-cancer-guidelines.

Zhu, Z. Turner, N.C. Loi, S. André, F. Martin, M. Diéras, V. Gelmon, K.A. Harbeck, N. Zhang, C. Cao, J.Q. Yan, Z. Lu, D.R. Wei, P. VanArsdale, T.L. Rejto, P.A. Huang, X. Rugo, H.S. Loibl, S. Cristofanilli, M. Finn, R.S. Liu, Y (2022) Comparative biomarker analysis of PALOMA-2/3 trials for palbociclib.. Show Abstract full text

While cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 (CDK4/6) inhibitors, including palbociclib, combined with endocrine therapy (ET), are becoming the standard-of-care for hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2‒negative metastatic breast cancer, further mechanistic insights are needed to maximize benefit from the treatment regimen. Herein, we conducted a systematic comparative analysis of gene expression/progression-free survival relationship from two phase 3 trials (PALOMA-2 [first-line] and PALOMA-3 [≥second-line]). In the ET-only arm, there was no inter-therapy line correlation. However, adding palbociclib resulted in concordant biomarkers independent of initial ET responsiveness, with shared sensitivity genes enriched in estrogen response and resistance genes over-represented by mTORC1 signaling and G2/M checkpoint. Biomarker patterns from the combination arm resembled patterns observed in ET in advanced treatment-naive patients, especially patients likely to be endocrine-responsive. Our findings suggest palbociclib may recondition endocrine-resistant tumors to ET, and may guide optimal therapeutic sequencing by partnering CDK4/6 inhibitors with different ETs. Pfizer (NCT01740427; NCT01942135).

Palafox, M. Monserrat, L. Bellet, M. Villacampa, G. Gonzalez-Perez, A. Oliveira, M. Brasó-Maristany, F. Ibrahimi, N. Kannan, S. Mina, L. Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Òdena, A. Sánchez-Guixé, M. Capelán, M. Azaro, A. Bruna, A. Rodríguez, O. Guzmán, M. Grueso, J. Viaplana, C. Hernández, J. Su, F. Lin, K. Clarke, R.B. Caldas, C. Arribas, J. Michiels, S. García-Sanz, A. Turner, N.C. Prat, A. Nuciforo, P. Dienstmann, R. Verma, C.S. Lopez-Bigas, N. Scaltriti, M. Arnedos, M. Saura, C. Serra, V (2022) High p16 expression and heterozygous RB1 loss are biomarkers for CDK4/6 inhibitor resistance in ER<sup>+</sup> breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

CDK4/6 inhibitors combined with endocrine therapy have demonstrated higher antitumor activity than endocrine therapy alone for the treatment of advanced estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer. Some of these tumors are de novo resistant to CDK4/6 inhibitors and others develop acquired resistance. Here, we show that p16 overexpression is associated with reduced antitumor activity of CDK4/6 inhibitors in patient-derived xenografts (n = 37) and estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer cell lines, as well as reduced response of early and advanced breast cancer patients to CDK4/6 inhibitors (n = 89). We also identified heterozygous RB1 loss as biomarker of acquired resistance and poor clinical outcome. Combination of the CDK4/6 inhibitor ribociclib with the PI3K inhibitor alpelisib showed antitumor activity in estrogen receptor-positive non-basal-like breast cancer patient-derived xenografts, independently of PIK3CA, ESR1 or RB1 mutation, also in drug de-escalation experiments or omitting endocrine therapy. Our results offer insights into predicting primary/acquired resistance to CDK4/6 inhibitors and post-progression therapeutic strategies.

Cunningham, N. Shepherd, S. Mohammed, K. Lee, K.A. Allen, M. Johnston, S. Kipps, E. McGrath, S. Noble, J. Parton, M. Ring, A. Turner, N.C. Okines, A.F.C (2022) Neratinib in advanced HER2-positive breast cancer: experience from the royal Marsden hospital.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>To describe the tolerability and efficacy of neratinib as a monotherapy and in combination with capecitabine in advanced HER2-positive breast cancer in a real-world setting.<h4>Methods</h4>Patients who received neratinib for advanced HER2-positive at the Royal Marsden Hospital NHS Trust between August 2016 and May 2020 were identified from electronic patient records and baseline characteristics, previous treatment and response to treatment were recorded. The primary endpoint of the study was progression-free survival (PFS). Secondary endpoints included overall survival (OS) and safety.<h4>Results</h4>Seventy-two patients were eligible for the analysis. Forty-five patients received neratinib in combination with capecitabine and 27 patients received monotherapy. After a median duration of follow-up of 38.5 months, the median PFS for all patients was 5.9 months (95% confidence interval (CI) 4.9-7.4 months) and median OS was 15.0 months (95% Cl 10.4-22.2 months). Amongst the 52.7% (38/72) patients with confirmed brain metastases at baseline, median PFS was 5.7 months (95% CI 2.9-7.4 months) and median OS was 12.5 months (95% CI 7.7-21.4 months). Despite anti-diarrhoeal prophylaxis, diarrhoea was the most frequent adverse event, reported in 64% of patients which was grade 3 in 10%. There were no grade 4 or 5 toxicities. Seven patients discontinued neratinib due to toxicity.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Neratinib monotherapy or in combination with capecitabine is a useful treatment for patients with and without brain metastases. PFS and OS were found to be similar as previous trial data. Routine anti-diarrhoeal prophylaxis allows this combination to be safely delivered to patients in a real-world setting.

Guerrero-Zotano, Á. Belli, S. Zielinski, C. Gil-Gil, M. Fernandez-Serra, A. Ruiz-Borrego, M. Ciruelos Gil, E.M. Pascual, J. Muñoz-Mateu, M. Bermejo, B. Margeli Vila, M. Antón, A. Murillo, L. Nissenbaum, B. Liu, Y. Herranz, J. Fernández-García, D. Caballero, R. López-Guerrero, J.A. Bianco, R. Formisano, L. Turner, N. Martín, M (2023) CCNE1 and PLK1 Mediate Resistance to Palbociclib in HR+/HER2- Metastatic Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>In hormone receptor-positive (HR+)/HER2- metastatic breast cancer (MBC), it is imperative to identify patients who respond poorly to cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 inhibitors (CDK4/6i) and to discover therapeutic targets to reverse this resistance. Non-luminal breast cancer subtype and high levels of CCNE1 are candidate biomarkers in this setting, but further validation is needed.<h4>Experimental design</h4>We performed mRNA gene expression profiling and correlation with progression-free survival (PFS) on 455 tumor samples included in the phase III PEARL study, which assigned patients with HR+/HER2- MBC to receive palbociclib+endocrine therapy (ET) versus capecitabine. Estrogen receptor-positive (ER+)/HER2- breast cancer cell lines were used to generate and characterize resistance to palbociclib+ET.<h4>Results</h4>Non-luminal subtype was more prevalent in metastatic (14%) than in primary tumor samples (4%). Patients with non-luminal tumors had median PFS of 2.4 months with palbociclib+ET and 9.3 months with capecitabine; HR 4.16, adjusted P value < 0.0001. Tumors with high CCNE1 expression (above median) also had worse median PFS with palbociclib+ET (6.2 months) than with capecitabine (9.3 months); HR 1.55, adjusted P value = 0.0036. In patients refractory to palbociclib+ET (PFS in the lower quartile), we found higher levels of Polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1). In an independent data set (PALOMA3), tumors with high PLK1 show worse median PFS than those with low PLK1 expression under palbociclib+ET treatment. In ER+/HER2- cell line models, we show that PLK1 inhibition reverses resistance to palbociclib+ET.<h4>Conclusions</h4>We confirm the association of non-luminal subtype and CCNE1 with resistance to CDK4/6i+ET in HR+ MBC. High levels of PLK1 mRNA identify patients with poor response to palbociclib, suggesting PLK1 could also play a role in the setting of resistance to CDK4/6i.

Turner, N. Huang-Bartlett, C. Kalinsky, K. Cristofanilli, M. Bianchini, G. Chia, S. Iwata, H. Janni, W. Ma, C.X. Mayer, E.L. Park, Y.H. Fox, S. Liu, X. McClain, S. Bidard, F.-.C (2023) Design of SERENA-6, a phase III switching trial of camizestrant in <i>ESR1</i>-mutant breast cancer during first-line treatment.. Show Abstract full text

<i>ESR1</i> mutation (<i>ESR1</i>m) is a frequent cause of acquired resistance to aromatase inhibitor (AI) plus cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6 inhibitors (CDK4/6i), which is a first-line therapy for hormone-receptor-positive (HR+)/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HER2-) advanced breast cancer (ABC). Camizestrant is a next-generation oral selective estrogen receptor degrader (SERD) that in a phase II study significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS) over fulvestrant (also a SERD) in ER+/HER2- ABC. SERENA-6 (NCT04964934) is a randomized, double-blind, phase III study evaluating the efficacy and safety of switching from an AI to camizestrant, while maintaining the same CDK4/6i, upon detection of <i>ESR1</i>m in circulating tumor DNA before clinical disease progression on first-line therapy for HR+/HER2- ABC. The aim is to treat <i>ESR1</i>m clones and extend the duration of control of ER-driven tumor growth, delaying the need for chemotherapy. The primary end point is PFS; secondary end points include chemotherapy-free survival, time to second progression event (PFS2), overall survival, patient-reported outcomes and safety.

Gnant, M. Turner, N.C. Hernando, C (2023) Managing a Long and Winding Road: Estrogen Receptor-Positive Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

We review key topics in the management of estrogen receptor (ER)-positive human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative breast cancer. The single biggest challenge in management of this disease is late relapse, and we review new methods for identifying which patients are at risk of late relapse and potential therapeutic approaches in clinical trials. CDK4/6 inhibitors have become a standard treatment option for high-risk patients in both the adjuvant setting and the first-line metastatic setting, and we review data on optimal treatment after progression on CDK4/6 inhibitors. Targeting the estrogen receptor remains the single most effective way of targeting the cancer, and we review the developments in new oral selective ER degraders that are becoming a standard of care in cancers with ESR1 mutations and potential future directions.

Curigliano, G. Dent, R. Llombart-Cussac, A. Pegram, M. Pusztai, L. Turner, N. Viale, G (2023) Incorporating clinicopathological and molecular risk prediction tools to improve outcomes in early HR+/HER2- breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Stratification of recurrence risk is a cornerstone of early breast cancer diagnosis that informs a patient's optimal treatment pathway. Several tools exist that combine clinicopathological and molecular information, including multigene assays, which can estimate risk of recurrence and quantify the potential benefit of different adjuvant treatment modalities. While the tools endorsed by treatment guidelines are supported by level I and II evidence and provide similar prognostic accuracy at the population level, they can yield discordant risk prediction at the individual patient level. This review examines the evidence for these tools in clinical practice and offers a perspective of potential future risk stratification strategies. Experience from clinical trials with cyclin D kinase 4/6 (CDK4/6) inhibitors in the setting of hormone receptor-positive (HR+)/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HER2-) early breast cancer is provided as an illustrative example of risk stratification.

Medford, A.J. Moy, B. Spring, L.M. Hurvitz, S.A. Turner, N.C. Bardia, A (2023) Molecular Residual Disease in Breast Cancer: Detection and Therapeutic Interception.. Show Abstract full text

Breast cancer remains a leading cause of cancer-related death in women despite screening and therapeutic advances. Early detection allows for resection of local disease; however, patients can develop metastatic recurrences years after curative treatment. There is no reliable blood-based monitoring after curative therapy, and radiographic evaluation for metastatic disease is performed only in response to symptoms. Advances in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) assays have allowed for a potential option for blood-based monitoring. The detection of ctDNA in the absence of overt metastasis or recurrent disease indicates molecular evidence of cancer, defined as molecular residual disease (MRD). Multiple studies have shown that MRD detection is strongly associated with disease recurrence, with a lead time prior to clinical evidence of recurrence of many months. Importantly, it is still unclear whether treatment changes in response to ctDNA detection will improve outcomes. There are currently ongoing trials evaluating the efficacy of therapy escalation in the setting of MRD, and these studies are being conducted in all major breast cancer subtypes. Additional therapies under study include CDK4/6 inhibitors, PARP inhibitors, HER2-targeted therapies, and immunotherapy. This review will summarize the underlying scientific principles of various MRD assays, their known prognostic roles in early breast cancer, and the ongoing clinical trials assessing the efficacy of therapy escalation in the setting of MRD.

Pascual, J. Gil-Gil, M. Proszek, P. Zielinski, C. Reay, A. Ruiz-Borrego, M. Cutts, R. Ciruelos Gil, E.M. Feber, A. Muñoz-Mateu, M. Swift, C. Bermejo, B. Herranz, J. Margeli Vila, M. Antón, A. Kahan, Z. Csöszi, T. Liu, Y. Fernandez-Garcia, D. Garcia-Murillas, I. Hubank, M. Turner, N.C. Martín, M (2023) Baseline Mutations and ctDNA Dynamics as Prognostic and Predictive Factors in ER-Positive/HER2-Negative Metastatic Breast Cancer Patients.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Prognostic and predictive biomarkers to cyclin-dependent kinases 4 and 6 inhibitors are lacking. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) can be used to profile these patients and dynamic changes in ctDNA could be an early predictor of treatment efficacy. Here, we conducted plasma ctDNA profiling in patients from the PEARL trial comparing palbociclib+fulvestrant versus capecitabine to investigate associations between baseline genomic landscape and on-treatment ctDNA dynamics with treatment efficacy.<h4>Experimental design</h4>Correlative blood samples were collected at baseline [cycle 1-day 1 (C1D1)] and prior to treatment [cycle 1-day 15 (C1D15)]. Plasma ctDNA was sequenced with a custom error-corrected capture panel, with both univariate and multivariate Cox models used for treatment efficacy associations. A prespecified methodology measuring ctDNA changes in clonal mutations between C1D1 and C1D15 was used for the on-treatment ctDNA dynamic model.<h4>Results</h4>201 patients were profiled at baseline, with ctDNA detection associated with worse progression-free survival (PFS)/overall survival (OS). Detectable TP53 mutation showed worse PFS and OS in both treatment arms, even after restricting population to baseline ctDNA detection. ESR1 mutations were associated with worse OS overall, which was lost when restricting population to baseline ctDNA detection. PIK3CA mutations confer worse OS only to patients on the palbociclib+fulvestrant treatment arm. ctDNA dynamics analysis (n = 120) showed higher ctDNA suppression in the capecitabine arm. Patients without ctDNA suppression showed worse PFS in both treatment arms.<h4>Conclusions</h4>We show impaired survival irrespective of endocrine or chemotherapy-based treatments for patients with hormone receptor-positive/HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer harboring plasma TP53 mutations. Early ctDNA suppression may provide treatment efficacy predictions. Further validation to fully demonstrate clinical utility of ctDNA dynamics is warranted.

Kingston, B. Bailleux, C. Delaloge, S. Schiavon, G. Scott, V. Lacroix-Triki, M. Carr, T.H. Kozarewa, I. Gevensleben, H. Kemp, Z. Pearson, A. Turner, N. André, F (2019) Exceptional Response to AKT Inhibition in Patients With Breast Cancer and Germline <i>PTEN</i> Mutations..
Ring, A. Kilburn, L.S. Pearson, A. Moretti, L. Afshari-Mehr, A. Wardley, A.M. Gurel, B. Macpherson, I.R. Riisnaes, R. Baird, R.D. Martin, S. Roylance, R. Johnson, H. Ferreira, A. Winter, M.C. Dunne, K. Copson, E. Hickish, T. Burcombe, R. Randle, K. Serra, V. Llop-Guevara, A. Bliss, J.M. Turner, N.C (2023) Olaparib and Ceralasertib (AZD6738) in Patients with Triple-Negative Advanced Breast Cancer: Results from Cohort E of the plasmaMATCH Trial (CRUK/15/010).. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Approximately 10% to 15% of triple-negative breast cancers (TNBC) have deleterious mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 and may benefit from PARP inhibitor treatment. PARP inhibitors may also increase exogenous replication stress and thereby increase sensitivity to inhibitors of ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) protein. This phase II study examined the activity of the combination of PARP inhibitor, olaparib, and ATR inhibitor, ceralasertib (AZD6738), in patients with advanced TNBC.<h4>Patients and methods</h4>Patients with TNBC on most recent biopsy who had received 1 or 2 lines of chemotherapy for advanced disease or had relapsed within 12 months of (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy were eligible. Treatment was olaparib 300 mg twice a day continuously and celarasertib 160 mg on days 1-7 on a 28-day cycle until disease progression. The primary endpoint was confirmed objective response rate (ORR). Tissue and plasma biomarker analyses were preplanned to identify predictors of response.<h4>Results</h4>70 evaluable patients were enrolled. Germline BRCA1/2 mutations were present in 10 (14%) patients and 3 (4%) patients had somatic BRCA mutations. The confirmed ORR was 12/70; 17.1% (95% confidence interval, 10.4-25.5). Responses were observed in patients without germline or somatic BRCA1/2 mutations, including patients with mutations in other homologous recombination repair genes and tumors with functional homologous recombination deficiency by RAD51 foci.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The response rate to olaparib and ceralasertib did not meet prespecified criteria for activity in the overall evaluable population, but responses were observed in patients who would not be expected to respond to olaparib monotherapy.

Turner, N.C. Laird, A.D. Telli, M.L. Rugo, H.S. Mailliez, A. Ettl, J. Grischke, E.-.M. Mina, L.A. Balmaña, J. Fasching, P.A. Hurvitz, S.A. Hopkins, J.F. Albacker, L.A. Chelliserry, J. Chen, Y. Conte, U. Wardley, A.M. Robson, M.E (2023) Genomic analysis of advanced breast cancer tumors from talazoparib-treated gBRCA1/2mut carriers in the ABRAZO study.. Show Abstract full text

These analyses explore the impact of homologous recombination repair gene mutations, including BRCA1/2 mutations and homologous recombination deficiency (HRD), on the efficacy of the poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor talazoparib in the open-label, two-cohort, Phase 2 ABRAZO trial in germline BRCA1/2-mutation carriers. In the evaluable intent-to-treat population (N = 60), 58 (97%) patients harbor ≥1 BRCA1/2 mutation(s) in tumor sequencing, with 95% (53/56) concordance between germline and tumor mutations, and 85% (40/47) of evaluable patients have BRCA locus loss of heterozygosity indicating HRD. The most prevalent non-BRCA tumor mutations are TP53 in patients with BRCA1 mutations and PIK3CA in patients with BRCA2 mutations. BRCA1- or BRCA2-mutated tumors show comparable clinical benefit within cohorts. While low patient numbers preclude correlations between HRD and efficacy, germline BRCA1/2 mutation detection from tumor-only sequencing shows high sensitivity and non-BRCA genetic/genomic events do not appear to influence talazoparib sensitivity in the ABRAZO trial.ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02034916.

Jhaveri, K.L. Bellet, M. Turner, N.C. Loi, S. Bardia, A. Boni, V. Sohn, J. Neilan, T.G. Villanueva-Vázquez, R. Kabos, P. García-Estévez, L. López-Miranda, E. Pérez-Fidalgo, J.A. Pérez-García, J.M. Yu, J. Fredrickson, J. Moore, H.M. Chang, C.-.W. Bond, J.W. Eng-Wong, J. Gates, M.R. Lim, E (2024) Phase Ia/b Study of Giredestrant ± Palbociclib and ± Luteinizing Hormone-Releasing Hormone Agonists in Estrogen Receptor-Positive, HER2-Negative, Locally Advanced/Metastatic Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Giredestrant is an investigational next-generation, oral, selective estrogen receptor antagonist and degrader for the treatment of estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer. We present the primary analysis results of the phase Ia/b GO39932 study (NCT03332797).<h4>Patients and methods</h4>Patients with ER+, HER2-negative locally advanced/metastatic breast cancer previously treated with endocrine therapy received single-agent giredestrant (10, 30, 90, or 250 mg), or giredestrant (100 mg) ± palbociclib 125 mg ± luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonist. Detailed cardiovascular assessment was conducted with giredestrant 100 mg. Endpoints included safety (primary), pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and efficacy.<h4>Results</h4>As of January 28, 2021, with 175 patients enrolled, no dose-limiting toxicity was observed, and the MTD was not reached. Adverse events (AE) related to giredestrant occurred in 64.9% and 59.4% of patients in the single-agent ± LHRH agonist and giredestrant + palbociclib ± LHRH agonist cohorts, respectively (giredestrant-only-related grade 3/4 AEs were reported in 4.5% of patients across the single-agent cohorts and 3.1% of those with giredestrant + palbociclib). Dose-dependent asymptomatic bradycardia was observed, but no clinically significant changes in cardiac-related outcomes: heart rate, blood pressure, or exercise duration. Clinical benefit was observed in all cohorts (48.6% of patients in the single-agent cohort and 81.3% in the giredestrant + palbociclib ± LHRH agonist cohort), with no clear dose relationship, including in patients with ESR1-mutated tumors.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Giredestrant was well tolerated and clinically active in patients who progressed on prior endocrine therapy. Results warrant further evaluation of giredestrant in randomized trials in early- and late-stage ER+ breast cancer.

Fitzpatrick, A. Iravani, M. Mills, A. Vicente, D. Alaguthurai, T. Roxanis, I. Turner, N.C. Haider, S. Tutt, A.N.J. Isacke, C.M (2023) Genomic profiling and pre-clinical modelling of breast cancer leptomeningeal metastasis reveals acquisition of a lobular-like phenotype.. Show Abstract full text

Breast cancer leptomeningeal metastasis (BCLM), where tumour cells grow along the lining of the brain and spinal cord, is a devastating development for patients. Investigating this metastatic site is hampered by difficulty in accessing tumour material. Here, we utilise cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cell-free DNA (cfDNA) and CSF disseminated tumour cells (DTCs) to explore the clonal evolution of BCLM and heterogeneity between leptomeningeal and extracranial metastatic sites. Somatic alterations with potential therapeutic actionability were detected in 81% (17/21) of BCLM cases, with 19% detectable in CSF cfDNA only. BCLM was enriched in genomic aberrations in adherens junction and cytoskeletal genes, revealing a lobular-like breast cancer phenotype. CSF DTCs were cultured in 3D to establish BCLM patient-derived organoids, and used for the successful generation of BCLM in vivo models. These data reveal that BCLM possess a unique genomic aberration profile and highlight potential cellular dependencies in this hard-to-treat form of metastatic disease.

Kingston, B. Pearson, A. Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Sim, L.-.X. Cutts, R.J. Shah, H. Moretti, L. Kilburn, L.S. Johnson, H. Macpherson, I.R. Ring, A. Bliss, J.M. Hou, Y. Toy, W. Katzenellenbogen, J.A. Chandarlapaty, S. Turner, N.C (2024) ESR1 F404 Mutations and Acquired Resistance to Fulvestrant in ESR1-Mutant Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

Fulvestrant is used to treat patients with hormone receptor-positive advanced breast cancer, but acquired resistance is poorly understood. PlasmaMATCH Cohort A (NCT03182634) investigated the activity of fulvestrant in patients with activating ESR1 mutations in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA). Baseline ESR1 mutations Y537S are associated with poor outcomes and Y537C with good outcomes. Sequencing of baseline and EOT ctDNA samples (n = 69) revealed 3/69 (4%) patients acquired novel ESR1 F404 mutations (F404L, F404I, and F404V), in cis with activating mutations. In silico modeling revealed that ESR1 F404 contributes to fulvestrant binding to estrogen receptor-alpha (ERα) through a pi-stacking bond, with mutations disrupting this bond. In vitro analysis demonstrated that single F404L, E380Q, and D538G models were less sensitive to fulvestrant, whereas compound mutations D538G + F404L and E380Q + F404L were resistant. Several oral ERα degraders were active against compound mutant models. We have identified a resistance mechanism specific to fulvestrant that can be targeted by treatments in clinical development.<h4>Significance</h4>Novel F404 ESR1 mutations may be acquired to cause overt resistance to fulvestrant when combined with preexisting activating ESR1 mutations. Novel combinations of mutations in the ER ligand binding domain may cause drug-specific resistance, emphasizing the potential of similar drug-specific mutations to impact the efficacy of oral ER degraders in development. This article is featured in Selected Articles from This Issue, p. 201.

Lalondrelle, S. Lee, J. Cutts, R.J. Garcia Murillas, I. Matthews, N. Turner, N. Harrington, K. Vroobel, K. Moretti, E. Bhide, S.A (2023) Predicting Response to Radical Chemoradiotherapy with Circulating HPV DNA (cHPV-DNA) in Locally Advanced Uterine Cervix Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>The majority of locally advanced cervical cancers (LaCC) are causally related to HPV. We sought to investigate the utility of an ultra-sensitive HPV-DNA next generation sequencing (NGS) assay-panHPV-detect-in LaCC treated with chemoradiotherapy, as a marker of treatment response and persistent disease.<h4>Method</h4>Serial blood samples were collected from 22 patients with LaCC before, during and after chemoradiation. The presence of circulating HPV-DNA was correlated with clinical and radiological outcomes.<h4>Results</h4>The panHPV-detect test demonstrated a sensitivity and specificity of 88% (95% CI-70-99%) and 100% (95% CI-30-100%), respectively, and correctly identified the HPV-subtype (16, 18, 45, 58). After a median follow up of 16 months, and three relapses all had detectable cHPV-DNA at 3 months post-CRT despite complete response on imaging. Another four patients with radiological partial or equivocal response and undetectable cHPV-DNA at the 3-month time point did not go on to develop relapse. All patients with radiological CR and undetectable cHPV-DNA at 3-months remained disease free.<h4>Conclusions</h4>These results demonstrate that the panHPV-detect test shows high sensitivity and specificity for detecting cHPV-DNA in plasma. The test has potential applications in assessment of the response to CRT and in monitoring for relapse, and these initial findings warrant validation in a larger cohort.

Schmid, P. Turner, N.C. Barrios, C.H. Isakoff, S.J. Kim, S.-.B. Sablin, M.-.P. Saji, S. Savas, P. Vidal, G.A. Oliveira, M. O'Shaughnessy, J. Italiano, A. Espinosa, E. Boni, V. White, S. Rojas, B. Freitas-Junior, R. Chae, Y. Bondarenko, I. Lee, J. Torres Mattos, C. Martinez Rodriguez, J.L. Lam, L.H. Jones, S. Reilly, S.-.J. Huang, X. Shah, K. Dent, R (2024) First-Line Ipatasertib, Atezolizumab, and Taxane Triplet for Metastatic Triple-Negative Breast Cancer: Clinical and Biomarker Results.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>To evaluate a triplet regimen combining immune checkpoint blockade, AKT pathway inhibition, and (nab-) paclitaxel as first-line therapy for locally advanced/metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (mTNBC).<h4>Patients and methods</h4>The single-arm CO40151 phase Ib study (NCT03800836), the single-arm signal-seeking cohort of IPATunity130 (NCT03337724), and the randomized phase III IPATunity170 trial (NCT04177108) enrolled patients with previously untreated mTNBC. Triplet therapy comprised intravenous atezolizumab 840 mg (days 1 and 15), oral ipatasertib 400 mg/day (days 1-21), and intravenous paclitaxel 80 mg/m2 (or nab-paclitaxel 100 mg/m2; days 1, 8, and 15) every 28 days. Exploratory translational research aimed to elucidate mechanisms and molecular markers of sensitivity and resistance.<h4>Results</h4>Among 317 patients treated with the triplet, efficacy ranged across studies as follows: median progression-free survival (PFS) 5.4 to 7.4 months, objective response rate 44% to 63%, median duration of response 5.6 to 11.1 months, and median overall survival 15.7 to 28.3 months. The safety profile was consistent with the known toxicities of each agent. Grade ≥3 adverse events were more frequent with the triplet than with doublets or single-agent paclitaxel. Patients with PFS >10 months were characterized by NF1, CCND3, and PIK3CA alterations and increased immune pathway activity. PFS <5 months was associated with CDKN2A/CDKN2B/MTAP alterations and lower predicted phosphorylated AKT-S473 levels.<h4>Conclusions</h4>In patients with mTNBC receiving an ipatasertib/atezolizumab/taxane triplet regimen, molecular characteristics may identify those with particularly favorable or unfavorable outcomes, potentially guiding future research efforts.

Coakley, M. Villacampa, G. Sritharan, P. Swift, C. Dunne, K. Kilburn, L. Goddard, K. Pipinikas, C. Rojas, P. Emmett, W. Hall, P. Harper-Wynne, C. Hickish, T. Macpherson, I. Okines, A. Wardley, A. Wheatley, D. Waters, S. Palmieri, C. Winter, M. Cutts, R.J. Garcia-Murillas, I. Bliss, J. Turner, N.C (2024) Comparison of Circulating Tumor DNA Assays for Molecular Residual Disease Detection in Early-Stage Triple-Negative Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Detection of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in patients who have completed treatment for early-stage breast cancer is associated with a high risk of relapse, yet the optimal assay for ctDNA detection is unknown.<h4>Experimental design</h4>The cTRAK-TN clinical trial prospectively used tumor-informed digital PCR (dPCR) assays for ctDNA molecular residual disease (MRD) detection in early-stage triple-negative breast cancer. We compared tumor-informed dPCR assays with tumor-informed personalized multimutation sequencing assays in 141 patients from cTRAK-TN.<h4>Results</h4>MRD was first detected by personalized sequencing in 47.9% of patients, 0% first detected by dPCR, and 52.1% with both assays simultaneously (P < 0.001; Fisher exact test). The median lead time from ctDNA detection to relapse was 6.1 months with personalized sequencing and 3.9 months with dPCR (P = 0.004, mixed-effects Cox model). Detection of MRD at the first time point was associated with a shorter time to relapse compared with detection at subsequent time points (median lead time 4.2 vs. 7.1 months; P = 0.02).<h4>Conclusions</h4>Personalized multimutation sequencing assays have potential clinically important improvements in clinical outcome in the early detection of MRD.

Morrison, L. Loibl, S. Turner, N.C (2024) The CDK4/6 inhibitor revolution - a game-changing era for breast cancer treatment.. Show Abstract full text

Cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 4/6 inhibition in combination with endocrine therapy is the standard-of-care treatment for patients with advanced-stage hormone receptor-positive, HER2 non-amplified (HR<sup>+</sup>HER2<sup>-</sup>) breast cancer. These agents can also be administered as adjuvant therapy to patients with higher-risk early stage disease. Nonetheless, the clinical success of these agents has created several challenges, such as how to address acquired resistance, identifying which patients are most likely to benefit from therapy prior to treatment, and understanding the optimal timing of administration and sequencing of these agents. In this Review, we describe the rationale for targeting CDK4/6 in patients with breast cancer, including a summary of updated clinical evidence and how this should inform clinical practice. We also discuss ongoing research efforts that are attempting to address the various challenges created by the widespread implementation of these agents.

Okines, A.F.C. Irfan, T. Mohammed, K. Ring, A. Parton, M. Kipps, E. Johnston, S. Turner, N.C (2022) Vinorelbine After Prior Treatment With Eribulin for Advanced Breast Cancer: A Single-Centre Experience Suggesting Cross-Resistance.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Introduction</h4>The tubulin inhibitor, eribulin, improves survival for previously treated advanced breast cancer (ABC) compared to chemotherapy of physician's choice, including vinorelbine, an older anti-tubulin. Vinorelbine is commonly still used after eribulin, but potentially risks cross-resistance and its efficacy in this setting is unproven.<h4>Materials and methods</h4>A retrospective analysis of all patients who received vinorelbine after prior eribulin (VAE) 2011-2015 and a parallel cohort of consecutive patients who received vinorelbine without prior eribulin (VWE) for previously treated ABC between 2005 and 2011. Patient demographics, histopathological features, treatment duration and responses were recorded. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival from date of first vinorelbine for each cohort. Secondary endpoints included radiological response rate, and overall survival (OS).<h4>Results</h4>Thirty-five VAE and 103 VWE patients were identified, all female, 71.4% and 78.6% were ER positive/HER2 negative, 8.6% and 6.8% HER2 positive, and 20.0% and 14.6% triple negative for VAE and VWE cohorts, respectively. The median number of lines of chemotherapy lines prior to vinorelbine was 4 (range 2-6) and 2 (range 0-4), respectively. Fifteen VAE patients (42.9%) received ≥1 line of chemotherapy between eribulin and vinorelbine. VAE and WWE Patients received a median of 3 cycles of vinorelbine (range 1-9 and 1-12, respectively). The median progression-free survival for VAE patients was 2.1 months and 2.0 months for VWE patients. No VAE patients were progression-free at 24 weeks, compared to 15.5% of VWE patients. Median OS from commencing vinorelbine was 4.3 months for VAE and 6.4 months for VWE patients.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Vinorelbine was of limited benefit after prior eribulin in our study, suggesting cross-resistance. Even without prior eribulin, only 15% of patients experienced clinical benefit from vinorelbine monotherapy.

Turner, N.C. Oliveira, M. Howell, S.J. Dalenc, F. Cortes, J. Gomez Moreno, H.L. Hu, X. Jhaveri, K. Krivorotko, P. Loibl, S. Morales Murillo, S. Okera, M. Park, Y.H. Sohn, J. Toi, M. Tokunaga, E. Yousef, S. Zhukova, L. de Bruin, E.C. Grinsted, L. Schiavon, G. Foxley, A. Rugo, H.S. CAPItello-291 Study Group, (2023) Capivasertib in Hormone Receptor-Positive Advanced Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>AKT pathway activation is implicated in endocrine-therapy resistance. Data on the efficacy and safety of the AKT inhibitor capivasertib, as an addition to fulvestrant therapy, in patients with hormone receptor-positive advanced breast cancer are limited.<h4>Methods</h4>In a phase 3, randomized, double-blind trial, we enrolled eligible pre-, peri-, and postmenopausal women and men with hormone receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative advanced breast cancer who had had a relapse or disease progression during or after treatment with an aromatase inhibitor, with or without previous cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6 (CDK4/6) inhibitor therapy. Patients were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive capivasertib plus fulvestrant or placebo plus fulvestrant. The dual primary end point was investigator-assessed progression-free survival assessed both in the overall population and among patients with AKT pathway-altered (<i>PIK3CA</i>, <i>AKT1</i>, or <i>PTEN</i>) tumors. Safety was assessed.<h4>Results</h4>Overall, 708 patients underwent randomization; 289 patients (40.8%) had AKT pathway alterations, and 489 (69.1%) had received a CDK4/6 inhibitor previously for advanced breast cancer. In the overall population, the median progression-free survival was 7.2 months in the capivasertib-fulvestrant group, as compared with 3.6 months in the placebo-fulvestrant group (hazard ratio for progression or death, 0.60; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.51 to 0.71; P<0.001). In the AKT pathway-altered population, the median progression-free survival was 7.3 months in the capivasertib-fulvestrant group, as compared with 3.1 months in the placebo-fulvestrant group (hazard ratio, 0.50; 95% CI, 0.38 to 0.65; P<0.001). The most frequent adverse events of grade 3 or higher in patients receiving capivasertib-fulvestrant were rash (in 12.1% of patients, vs. in 0.3% of those receiving placebo-fulvestrant) and diarrhea (in 9.3% vs. 0.3%). Adverse events leading to discontinuation were reported in 13.0% of the patients receiving capivasertib and in 2.3% of those receiving placebo.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Capivasertib-fulvestrant therapy resulted in significantly longer progression-free survival than treatment with fulvestrant alone among patients with hormone receptor-positive advanced breast cancer whose disease had progressed during or after previous aromatase inhibitor therapy with or without a CDK4/6 inhibitor. (Funded by AstraZeneca and the National Cancer Institute; CAPItello-291 ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04305496.).

Browne, I.M. André, F. Chandarlapaty, S. Carey, L.A. Turner, N.C (2024) Optimal targeting of PI3K-AKT and mTOR in advanced oestrogen receptor-positive breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

The growing availability of targeted therapies for patients with advanced oestrogen receptor-positive breast cancer has improved survival, but there remains much to learn about the optimal management of these patients. The PI3K-AKT and mTOR pathways are among the most commonly activated pathways in breast cancer, whose crucial role in the pathogenesis of this tumour type has spurred major efforts to target this pathway at specific kinase hubs. Approvals for oestrogen receptor-positive advanced breast cancer include the PI3K inhibitor alpelisib for PIK3CA-mutated tumours, the AKT inhibitor capivasertib for tumours with alterations in PIK3CA, AKT1, or PTEN, and the mTOR inhibitor everolimus, which is used irrespective of mutation status. The availability of different inhibitors leaves physicians with a potentially challenging decision over which of these therapies should be used for individual patients and when. In this Review, we present a comprehensive summary of our current understanding of the pathways and the three inhibitors and discuss strategies for the optimal sequencing of therapies in the clinic, particularly after progression on a CDK4/6 inhibitor.

Pascual, J. Attard, G. Bidard, F.-.C. Curigliano, G. De Mattos-Arruda, L. Diehn, M. Italiano, A. Lindberg, J. Merker, J.D. Montagut, C. Normanno, N. Pantel, K. Pentheroudakis, G. Popat, S. Reis-Filho, J.S. Tie, J. Seoane, J. Tarazona, N. Yoshino, T. Turner, N.C (2022) ESMO recommendations on the use of circulating tumour DNA assays for patients with cancer: a report from the ESMO Precision Medicine Working Group.. Show Abstract full text

Circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) assays conducted on plasma are rapidly developing a strong evidence base for use in patients with cancer. The European Society for Medical Oncology convened an expert working group to review the analytical and clinical validity and utility of ctDNA assays. For patients with advanced cancer, validated and adequately sensitive ctDNA assays have utility in identifying actionable mutations to direct targeted therapy, and may be used in routine clinical practice, provided the limitations of the assays are taken into account. Tissue-based testing remains the preferred test for many cancer patients, due to limitations of ctDNA assays detecting fusion events and copy number changes, although ctDNA assays may be routinely used when faster results will be clinically important, or when tissue biopsies are not possible or inappropriate. Reflex tumour testing should be considered following a non-informative ctDNA result, due to false-negative results with ctDNA testing. In patients treated for early-stage cancers, detection of molecular residual disease or molecular relapse, has high evidence of clinical validity in anticipating future relapse in many cancers. Molecular residual disease/molecular relapse detection cannot be recommended in routine clinical practice, as currently there is no evidence for clinical utility in directing treatment. Additional potential applications of ctDNA assays, under research development and not recommended for routine practice, include identifying patients not responding to therapy with early dynamic changes in ctDNA levels, monitoring therapy for the development of resistance mutations before clinical progression, and in screening asymptomatic people for cancer. Recommendations for reporting of results, future development of ctDNA assays and future clinical research are made.

Turner, N.C. Swift, C. Jenkins, B. Kilburn, L. Coakley, M. Beaney, M. Fox, L. Goddard, K. Garcia-Murillas, I. Proszek, P. Hall, P. Harper-Wynne, C. Hickish, T. Kernaghan, S. Macpherson, I.R. Okines, A.F.C. Palmieri, C. Perry, S. Randle, K. Snowdon, C. Stobart, H. Wardley, A.M. Wheatley, D. Waters, S. Winter, M.C. Hubank, M. Allen, S.D. Bliss, J.M. c-TRAK TN investigators, (2023) Results of the c-TRAK TN trial: a clinical trial utilising ctDNA mutation tracking to detect molecular residual disease and trigger intervention in patients with moderate- and high-risk early-stage triple-negative breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>Post-treatment detection of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) in early-stage triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) patients predicts high risk of relapse. c-TRAK TN assessed the utility of prospective ctDNA surveillance in TNBC and the activity of pembrolizumab in patients with ctDNA detected [ctDNA positive (ctDNA+)].<h4>Patients and methods</h4>c-TRAK TN, a multicentre phase II trial, with integrated prospective ctDNA surveillance by digital PCR, enrolled patients with early-stage TNBC and residual disease following neoadjuvant chemotherapy, or stage II/III with adjuvant chemotherapy. ctDNA surveillance comprised three-monthly blood sampling to 12 months (18 months if samples were missed due to coronavirus disease), and ctDNA+ patients were randomised 2 : 1 to intervention : observation. ctDNA results were blinded unless patients were allocated to intervention, when staging scans were done and those free of recurrence were offered pembrolizumab. A protocol amendment (16 September 2020) closed the observation group; all subsequent ctDNA+ patients were allocated to intervention. Co-primary endpoints were (i) ctDNA detection rate and (ii) sustained ctDNA clearance rate on pembrolizumab (NCT03145961).<h4>Results</h4>Two hundred and eight patients registered between 30 January 2018 and 06 December 2019, 185 had tumour sequenced, 171 (92.4%) had trackable mutations, and 161 entered ctDNA surveillance. Rate of ctDNA detection by 12 months was 27.3% (44/161, 95% confidence interval 20.6% to 34.9%). Seven patients relapsed without prior ctDNA detection. Forty-five patients entered the therapeutic component (intervention n = 31; observation n = 14; one observation patient was re-allocated to intervention following protocol amendment). Of patients allocated to intervention, 72% (23/32) had metastases on staging at the time of ctDNA+, and 4 patients declined pembrolizumab. Of the five patients who commenced pembrolizumab, none achieved sustained ctDNA clearance.<h4>Conclusions</h4>c-TRAK TN is the first prospective study to assess whether ctDNA assays have clinical utility in guiding therapy in TNBC. Patients had a high rate of metastatic disease on ctDNA detection. Findings have implications for future trial design, emphasising the importance of commencing ctDNA testing early, with more sensitive and/or frequent ctDNA testing regimes.

Dent, R.A. Kim, S.-.B. Oliveira, M. Barrios, C. O'Shaughnessy, J. Isakoff, S.J. Saji, S. Freitas-Junior, R. Philco, M. Bondarenko, I. Lian, Q. Bradley, D. Hinton, H. Wongchenko, M.J. Reilly, S.-.J. Turner, N (2024) Ipatasertib plus Paclitaxel for Patients with PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN-Altered Locally Advanced Unresectable or Metastatic Triple-Negative Breast Cancer in the IPATunity130 Phase III Trial.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>In the randomized phase II LOTUS trial, combining ipatasertib with first-line paclitaxel for triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) improved progression-free survival (PFS), particularly in patients with PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN-altered tumors. We aimed to validate these findings in a biomarker-selected TNBC population.<h4>Patients and methods</h4>In Cohort A of the randomized double-blind placebo-controlled phase III IPATunity130 trial, taxane-eligible patients with PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN-altered measurable advanced TNBC and no prior chemotherapy for advanced disease were randomized 2:1 to ipatasertib (400 mg, days 1-21) or placebo, both plus paclitaxel (80 mg/m2, days 1, 8, and 15), every 28 days until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. The primary endpoint was investigator-assessed PFS.<h4>Results</h4>Between February 2018 and April 2020, 255 patients were randomized (168 to ipatasertib, 87 to placebo). At the primary analysis, there was no significant difference between treatment arms in PFS [hazard ratio 1.02, 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.71-1.45; median 7.4 months with ipatasertib vs. 6.1 months with placebo]. The final analysis showed no difference in overall survival between treatment arms (hazard ratio 1.08, 95% CI, 0.73-1.58; median 24.4 vs. 24.9 months, respectively). Ipatasertib was associated with more grade ≥3 diarrhea (9% vs. 2%) and adverse events leading to dose reduction (39% vs. 14%) but similar incidences of grade ≥3 adverse events (51% vs. 46%). Exploratory subgroup analyses by PAM50 and Burstein gene expression showed inconsistent results.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Adding ipatasertib to paclitaxel did not improve efficacy in PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN-altered advanced TNBC. Biomarkers for benefit from PI3K/AKT pathway inhibition in TNBC remain poorly understood.

Jhaveri, K.L. Accordino, M.K. Bedard, P.L. Cervantes, A. Gambardella, V. Hamilton, E. Italiano, A. Kalinsky, K. Krop, I.E. Oliveira, M. Schmid, P. Saura, C. Turner, N.C. Varga, A. Cheeti, S. Hilz, S. Hutchinson, K.E. Jin, Y. Royer-Joo, S. Peters, U. Shankar, N. Schutzman, J.L. Juric, D (2024) Phase I/Ib Trial of Inavolisib Plus Palbociclib and Endocrine Therapy for &lt;i&gt;PIK3CA&lt;/i&gt;-Mutated, Hormone Receptor-Positive, Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2-Negative Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>To investigate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), and preliminary antitumor activity of inavolisib, a potent and selective small-molecule inhibitor of p110α that promotes the degradation of mutated p110α, in combination with palbociclib and endocrine therapy (ET), in a phase I/Ib study in patients with <i>PIK3CA</i>-mutated, hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative locally advanced/metastatic breast cancer (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03006172).<h4>Methods</h4>Women ≥18 years of age received inavolisib, palbociclib, and letrozole (Inavo + Palbo + Letro arm) or fulvestrant (Inavo + Palbo + Fulv arm) until unacceptable toxicity or disease progression. The primary objective was to evaluate safety or tolerability.<h4>Results</h4>Fifty-three patients were included, 33 in the Inavo + Palbo + Letro arm and 20 in the Inavo + Palbo + Fulv arm. Median duration of inavolisib treatment was 15.7 and 20.8 months (cutoff: March 27, 2023), respectively. Treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) occurred in all patients; the most frequent were stomatitis, hyperglycemia, and diarrhea; grade ≥3 any TRAE rates were 87.9% and 85.0%; 6.1% and 10.0% discontinued any treatment due to TRAEs in the Inavo + Palbo + Letro and Inavo + Palbo + Fulv arms, respectively. No PK drug-drug interactions (DDIs) were observed among the study treatments when administered. Confirmed objective response rates were 52.0% and 40.0% in patients with measurable disease, and median progression-free survival was 23.3 and 35.0 months in the Inavo + Palbo + Letro and Inavo + Palbo + Fulv arms, respectively. Available paired pre- and on-treatment tumor tissue and circulating tumor DNA analyses confirmed the effects of study treatment on pharmacodynamic and pathophysiologic biomarkers of response.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Inavolisib plus palbociclib and ET demonstrated a manageable safety profile, lack of DDIs, and promising preliminary antitumor activity.

Turner, N. Saura, C. Aftimos, P. van den Tweel, E. Oesterholt, M. Koper, N. Colleoni, M. Kaczmarek, E. Punie, K. Song, X. Armstrong, A. Bianchi, G. Stradella, A. Ladoire, S. Lim, J.S.J. Quenel-Tueux, N. Tan, T.J. Escrivá-de-Romaní, S. O'Shaughnessy, J. TULIP Trial Investigators, (2024) Trastuzumab Duocarmazine in Pretreated Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2-Positive Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer: An Open-Label, Randomized, Phase III Trial (TULIP).. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Purpose</h4>Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-targeted therapy is standard of care for HER2-positive (HER2+) breast cancer, but most patients develop progressive disease with persistent HER2 expression. No definitive treatment guidance currently exists beyond second line. Trastuzumab duocarmazine (T-Duo) is a third-generation, HER2-targeted antibody-drug conjugate that demonstrated efficacy and acceptable safety in phase I studies of heavily pretreated patients with HER2+/HER2-low breast cancer.<h4>Methods</h4>In this open-label, randomized, phase III trial, T-Duo was compared with physician's choice (PC) in patients with unresectable locally advanced/metastatic HER2+ breast cancer with progression during/after ≥2 HER2-targeted therapies or after trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1). The primary endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS) by blinded independent central review.<h4>Results</h4>In total, 437 patients were randomly assigned 2:1 to T-Duo (n = 291) or PC (n = 146). The median age was 56.0 years (range, 24-86); most patients (93.6%) had metastatic disease. The median time from diagnosis of metastatic disease to trial entry was 3.5 years; the median number of prior HER2-targeted therapies in metastatic setting was three. The median PFS was 7.0 months (95% CI, 5.4 to 7.2) with T-Duo versus 4.9 months (95% CI, 4.0 to 5.5; hazard ratio [HR], 0.64 [95% CI, 0.49 to 0.84]; <i>P</i> = .002) with PC. PFS benefit was maintained across most predefined subgroups. The median overall survival (first analysis) was 20.4 (T-Duo) versus 16.3 months (PC; HR, 0.83 [95% CI, 0.62 to 1.09]; <i>P</i> = .153). Objective response rate was 27.8% (T-Duo) versus 29.5% (PC); other efficacy end points-clinical benefit rate, duration of response, and reduction in target lesion measurement-tended to favor T-Duo. Grade ≥3 treatment-emergent adverse events occurred in 52.8% (T-Duo) versus 48.2% (PC).<h4>Conclusion</h4>Treatment with T-Duo was manageable, but tolerability was affected by prevalent ocular toxicity, leading to a higher discontinuation rate in the T-Duo arm. T-Duo significantly reduced the risk of progression in patients with advanced HER2+ breast cancer who have progressed during/after ≥2 HER2-targeted therapies or after T-DM1.

Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Guan, J. Khalid, U. Ning, J. Costa, M.R. Chan, J. Li, Q. Fortin, J.-.P. Wong, W.R. Perampalam, P. Biton, A. Sandoval, W. Vijay, J. Hafner, M. Cutts, R. Wilson, G. Frankum, J. Roumeliotis, T.I. Alexander, J. Hickman, O. Brough, R. Haider, S. Choudhary, J. Lord, C.J. Swain, A. Metcalfe, C. Turner, N.C (2024) Inhibition of GPX4 enhances CDK4/6 inhibitor and endocrine therapy activity in breast cancer.. Show Abstract full text

CDK4/6 inhibition in combination with endocrine therapy is the standard of care for estrogen receptor (ER+) breast cancer, and although cytostasis is frequently observed, new treatment strategies that enhance efficacy are required. Here, we perform two independent genome-wide CRISPR screens to identify genetic determinants of CDK4/6 and endocrine therapy sensitivity. Genes involved in oxidative stress and ferroptosis modulate sensitivity, with GPX4 as the top sensitiser in both screens. Depletion or inhibition of GPX4 increases sensitivity to palbociclib and giredestrant, and their combination, in ER+ breast cancer models, with GPX4 null xenografts being highly sensitive to palbociclib. GPX4 perturbation additionally sensitises triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) models to palbociclib. Palbociclib and giredestrant induced oxidative stress and disordered lipid metabolism, leading to a ferroptosis-sensitive state. Lipid peroxidation is promoted by a peroxisome AGPAT3-dependent pathway in ER+ breast cancer models, rather than the classical ACSL4 pathway. Our data demonstrate that CDK4/6 and ER inhibition creates vulnerability to ferroptosis induction, that could be exploited through combination with GPX4 inhibitors, to enhance sensitivity to the current therapies in breast cancer.

Cutts, R. Ulrich, L. Beaney, M. Robert, M. Coakley, M. Bunce, C. Crestani, G.W. Hrebien, S. Kalashnikova, E. Wu, H.-.T. Dashner, S. Sethi, H. Aleshin, A. Liu, M. Ring, A. Okines, A. Smith, I.E. Barry, P. Turner, N.C. Garcia-Murillas, I (2024) Association of post-operative ctDNA detection with outcomes of patients with early breast cancers.. Show Abstract full text

<h4>Background</h4>In early breast cancer (EBC) patients, we aimed to determine whether circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis following primary surgery, before systemic therapy, identified molecular residual disease and was associated with risk of relapse and relapse-free survival (RFS).<h4>Methods</h4>Plasma was collected, retrospectively, before surgery, 1-14 weeks post-operatively, and before adjuvant therapy, and in a subset of patients after adjuvant therapy. A personalized, tumor-informed, multiplex PCR next generation sequencing assay (Signatera™) was used for ctDNA detection and quantification. The primary objective was to compare RFS and distant recurrence-free survival (DRFS) in patients with detected versus non-detected ctDNA.<h4>Results</h4>A total of 48 patients with EBC (median age 50.5 years) [34 hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HR+/HER2-), 5 HER2+, 9 triple-negative breast cancer) were included. ctDNA was detected in 64.5% (20/31) of patients before surgery, and 35.4% (17/48) after surgery. ctDNA detection before surgery was associated with tumor grade (P = 0.019), ctDNA detection after surgery was associated with receptor subtype (P = 0.01). Patients with ctDNA detected after surgery had worse DRFS [hazard ratio = 5.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1-28.5, P = 0.04]. RFS in patients with ctDNA detected after surgery was worse than in those with lack of ctDNA detection, although not statistically significant (hazard ratio = 3.7, 95% CI 0.9-15.7, P = 0.073). Patients with ctDNA detected preoperatively or post-operatively had a trend towards worse RFS (hazard ratio = 7.8, 95% CI 0.9-63.7, P = 0.05) and DRFS (hazard ratio = 6.8, 95% CI 0.8-57, P = 0.07) compared with those with ctDNA undetected at both timepoints. ctDNA detection anticipated clinical relapse with a median lead time of 16 months.<h4>Conclusions</h4>In patients with treatment-naive EBC, ctDNA is detectable after surgery. The absence of ctDNA at a single post-surgical timepoint is associated with improved DRFS, supporting the development of future trials studying de-escalation of systemic therapy.

Gyorffy, B. Bottai, G. Lehmann-Che, J. Keri, G. Orfi, L. Iwamoto, T. Desmedt, C. Bianchini, G. Turner, N.C. de The, H. Andre, F. Sotiriou, C. Hortobagyi, G.N. Di Leo, A. Pusztai, L. Santarpia, L (2014) TP53 mutation-correlated genes predict the risk of tumor relapse and identify MPS1 as a potential therapeutic kinase in TP53-mutated breast cancers. full text
Andre, F. Baselga, J. Ellis, M.J. Hurvitz, S.A. Rugo, H.S. Turner, N.C. Argonza-Aviles, E. Lake, S. Shi, M.M. Anak, O (2010) Study CTKI258A2202: A multicenter, open-label phase II trial of dovitinib (TKI258) in FGFR1-amplified and nonamplified HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer.. full text
Santarpia, L. Iwamoto, T. Di Leo, A. Hayashi, N. Bottai, G. Stampfer, M. Andre, F. Turner, N.C. Symmans, W.F. Hortobagyi, G.N. Pusztai, L. Bianchini, G (2013) DNARepair Gene Patterns as Prognostic and Predictive Factors in Molecular Breast Cancer Subtypes. full text
Andre, F. Bachelot, T.D. Campone, M. Dalenc, F. Perez-Garcia, J.M. Hurvitz, S.A. Turner, N.C. Rugo, H.S. Shi, M.M. Zhang, Y. Kay, A.C.M. Yovine, A.J. Baselga, J (2011) A multicenter, open-label phase II trial of dovitinib, an FGFR1 inhibitor, in FGFR1 amplified and non-amplified metastatic breast cancer. full text
Andre, F. Bachelot, T.D. Campone, M. Dalenc, F. Perez-Garcia, J.M. Hurvitz, S.A. Turner, N.C. Rugo, H.S. Baselga, J. Zhang, Y. Grp, N.O.C (2011) A multicenter, open-label phase II trial of dovitinib, a fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) inhibitor, in FGFR1-amplified and nonamplified metastatic breast cancer (BC).. full text
Guiu, S. Michiels, S. Andre, F. Cortes, J. Denkert, C. Di Leo, A. Hennessy, B.T. Sorlie, T. Sotiriou, C. Turner, N. Van de Vijver, M. Viale, G. Loi, S. Reis-Filho, J.S (2012) Molecular subclasses of breast cancer: how do we define them? The IMPAKT 2012 Working Group Statement. full text

Conferences

Turner, N.C. Iorns, E. Smith, A. Lambros, M.B. Reis-Filho, J.S. Ashworth, A (2007) FGFR1 amplification is a breast cancer treatment target and is associated with endocrine therapy resistance.. full text
Turner, N (2012) DEVELOPMENT OF NEW TARGETED AGENTS FOR TNBC. full text
Abreu, M.H. Garcia-Murilla, I. Pearson, A. Shnyder, S. Knowles, M. Turner, N.C (2012) Functional Screens to Identify Mechanisms of Resistance to FGFR Inhibitors in FGFR Amplified and Mutated Cell Lines. full text
Aarts, M. Garcia-Murillas, I. Toniatti, C. Ashworth, A. Turner, N.C (2012) Parallel siRNA and Compound Screens to Identify Molecular Determinants of Sensitivity to WEE1 Inhibition in Breast Cancer. full text
Ng, C.K.Y. Weigelt, B. Garcia-Murillas, I. Schiavon, G. Hrebien, S. Cutts, R.J. Osin, P. Nerurkar, A. Kozarewa, I. Garrido, J.A. Dowsett, M. Smith, I.E. Reis-Filho, J.S. Turner, N.C (2015) High-depth sequencing of circulating tumor DNA to interrogate the genetics of residual micro-metastatic disease prior to relapse in early breast cancer. full text
Turner, N.C. Garcia-Murillas, I. Schiavon, G. Hrebien, S. Osin, P. Nerurkar, A. Kozarewa, L. Garrido, J.A. Dowsett, M. Smith, I.E (2014) Tracking tumor-specific mutations in circulating-free DNA to predict early relapse after treatment of primary breast cancer.. full text
Asghar, U. Herrera-Abreu, M.T. Cutts, R. Babina, I. Pearson, A. Turner, N.C (2015) Identification of subtypes of triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) that are sensitive to CDK4/6 inhibition..
Schiavon, G. Hrebien, S. Garcia-Murillas, I. Pearson, A. Tarazona, N. Lopez-Knowles, E. Ribas, R. Nerurkar, A. Osin, P. Martin, L.-.A. Dowsett, M. Smith, I.E. Turner, N.C (2015) ESR1 mutations evolve during the treatment of metastatic breast cancer, and detection in ctDNA predicts sensitivity to subsequent hormone therapy. full text
Turner, N.C. Oliveira, M. Armstrong, A. Sablin, M.-.P. Perez-Fidalgo, J.A. Herebien, S. Garcia-Murillas, I. Johnson, S. Foxley, A. Mahmood, A. Lindemann, J.P (2015) "BEECH", a phase I/II study of the AKT inhibitor AZD5363 combined with paclitaxel in patients with advanced or metastatic breast cancer: results from the dose-finding study, including quantitative assessment of circulating tumor DNA as a s. full text
Gellert, P. Ribas, R. Pancholi, S. Lopez-Knowles, E. Yeo, B. Garcia-Murillas, I. Pearson, A. Smith, I. Turner, N. Dowsett, M. Martin, L.-.A (2016) Occurrence of natural ESR1 mutations during acquisition of endocrine resistance in breast cancers and widely used ER plus cell lines. full text
Verma, S. DeMichele, A.M. Loi, S. Ro, J. Colleoni, M. Iwata, H. Harbeck, N. Stearns, V. Cristofanilli, M. Bartlett, C.H. Schnell, P. Zhang, K. Thiele, A. Turner, N.C. Rugo, H.S (2016) Updated safety from a double-blind phase 3 trial (PALOMA-3) of fulvestrant with placebo or with palbociclib in pre- and postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer that progressed on prior endocrine therapy. full text
Cristofanilli, M. Bondarenko, I. Ro, J. Im, S.-.A. Masuda, N. Colleoni, M. DeMichele, A.M. Loi, S. Verma, S. Iwata, H. Bartlett, C.H. Zhang, K. Theall, K.P. Turner, N.C. Slamon, D.J (2016) PALOMA3: Phase 3 trial of fulvestrant with or without palbociclib in pre and postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer that progressed on prior endocrine therapy-confirmed efficacy and safety. full text
Turner, N.C. Ro, J. Andre, F. Loi, S. Verma, S. Iwata, H. Harbeck, N. Loibl, S. Huang, C. Zhang, B.K. Giorgetti, C. Randolph, S. Koehler, M. Cristofanilli, M (2015) PALOMA3: A double-blind, phase III trial of fulvestrant with or without palbociclib in pre- and post-menopausal women with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer that progressed on prior endocrine therapy..
Turner, N.C. Balmana, J. Fasching, P.A. Hurvitz, S.A. Telli, M.L. Visco, F. Wardley, A.M. Zhang, C. Lokker, N.A. Lounsbury, D.L. Robson, M.E (2015) A phase 2 study (2-stage, 2-cohort) of the oral PARP inhibitor talazoparib (BMN 673) in patients with germline BRCA mutation and locally advanced and/or metastatic breast cancer (ABRAZO).. full text
Turner, N (2014) After mTOR inhibitors: What is next?. full text
Turner, N.C. Ro, J. Andre, F. Loi, S. Verma, S. Iwata, H. Harbeck, N. Loibl, S. Bartlett, C.H. Zhang, K. Giorgetti, C. Randolph, S. Koehler, M. Cristofanilli, M (2015) PALOMA3: A double-blind, phase III trial of fulvestrant with or without palbociclib in pre- and post-menopausal women with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer that progressed on prior endocrine therapy.
Turner, N.C. Balmana, J. Fasching, P.A. Hurvitz, S.A. Rugo, H.S. Telli, M.L. Visco, F. Wardley, A.M. Yang, X. Lokker, N.A. Lounsbury, D.L. Robson, M.E (2016) ABRAZO: An international phase 2 (2-stage, 2-cohort) study of the oral PARP inhibitor talazoparib (BMN 673) in BRCA mutation subjects with locally advanced and/or metastatic breast cancer. full text
Thanopoulou, E. Omarini, C. Yeo, B. Allen, M. Parton, M. Turner, N.C. O'Brien, M.E.R. Johnston, S.R.D. Smith, I.E (2014) Safety and efficacy of eribulin mesylate (EM) in patients with advanced breast cancer: The Royal Marsden experience. full text
Thanopoulou, E. Omarini, C. Patwari, S. Allen, M. Smith, I.E. Parton, M. O'Brien, M. Turner, N. Johnston, S.R.D (2014) Incidence and management of toxicities associated with everolimus and exemestane (EVE plus EXE) in ER plus advanced breast cancer: The Royal Marsden experience. full text
Balmana, J. Tryfonidis, K. Audeh, W. Goulioti, T. Slaets, L. Agarwal, S. Lema, N. Cameron, D. Turner, N (2016) A phase III, randomized, open label, multicenter, controlled trial of niraparib versus physician's choice in previously-treated, HER2 negative, germline BRCA mutation-positive breast cancer patients. An EORTC-BIG intergroup study (BRAVO study). full text
Turner, N.C. Balmana, J. Domchek, S.M. Visco, F. Zhang, C. Lokker, N.A. Lounsbury, D.L. Robson, M.E (2015) A phase 2, 2-stage, 2-cohort study of the oral PARP inhibitor BMN 673 in patients with germline BRCA mutation and locally advanced and/or metastatic breast cancer (ABRAZO study). full text
Verma, S. DeMichele, A.M. Loi, S. Ro, J. Colleoni, M. Iwata, H. Harbeck, N. Stearns, V. Cristofanilli, M. Bartlett, C.H. Schnell, P. Zhang, K. Thiele, A. Turner, N.C. Rugo, H.S (2016) Updated safety from a double-blind phase 3 trial (PALOMA-3) of fulvestrant with placebo or with palbociclib in pre- and postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer that progressed on prior endocrine therapy. full text
Cristofanilli, M. Bondarenko, I. Ro, J. Im, S.-.A. Masuda, N. Colleoni, M. DeMichele, A.M. Loi, S. Verma, S. Iwata, H. Bartlett, C.H. Zhang, K. Theall, K.P. Turner, N.C. Slamon, D.J (2016) PALOMA3: Phase 3 trial of fulvestrant with or without palbociclib in pre and postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer that progressed on prior endocrine therapy-confirmed efficacy and safety.
Andre, F. Daly, F. Azim, H.A. Agrapart, V. Fumagalli, D. Gingras, I. Guitart, M. Lange, A. Turner, N.C. Pierrat, M.-.J. Loibl, S. Poirot, C. Curigliano, G. Loi, S. Pallis, A. Piccart, M. Cortes, J (2016) FINESSE - An open, 3-cohort, phase II trial testing oral administration of lucitanib in patients with FGFR1-amplified or non-amplified oestrogeN rEceptor poSitive metaStatic breast cancEr. full text
Andre, F. Daly, F. Azim, H.A. Agrapart, V. Goulioti, T. Pinto, A.C.D.C.P. Saba, C. Guitart, M. Turner, N.C. Pierrat, M.J. Loibl, S. Chesnel, T. Curigliano, G. Loi, S. Piccart-Gebhart, M.J. Cortes, J (2014) FINESSE: An open, three-cohort, phase H trial testing oral administration of lucitanib in patients with FGFR1-amplified or nonamplified estrogen receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer. full text
Harbeck, N. Cristofanilli, M. Ro, J. Andre, F. Loi, S. Verma, S. Iwata, H. Loibl, S. Bartlett, C.H. Zhang, K. Iyer, S. Thiele, A. Theall, K. Koehler, M. Turner, N (2015) A double blind phase 3 trial of fulvestrant with placebo or palbociclib in pre- and post-menopausal women with hormone receptor-positive (HR+ve), HER2-negative (HER2-ve) metastatic breast cancer (MBC) that progressed on prior endocrine therapy (PALOMA 3): Detailed analysis of patient-reported outcomes.
Bedard, P.L. Accordino, M.K. Cervantes, A. Gambardella, V. Hamilton, E.P. Italiano, A. Juric, D. Kalinsky, K. Krop, I.E. Oliveira, M. Saura, C. Schmid, P. Turner, N.C. Varga, A. Shankar, N. Schutzman, J. Royer Joo, S. Martin, M.V. Jhaveri, K.L (2022) Long-term safety of inavolisib (GDC-0077) in an ongoing phase 1/1b study evaluating monotherapy and in combination (combo) with palbociclib and/or endocrine therapy in patients (pts) with PIK3CA-mutated, hormone receptor-positive/HER2-negative (HR+/ HER2-) metastatic breast cancer (BC)..
Rugo, H.S. Oliveira, M. Howell, S.J. Dalenc, F. Cortes, J. Gomez, H.L. Hu, X. Iwata, H. Jhaveri, K.L. Loibl, S. Murillo, S.M. Okera, M. Park, Y.H. Sohn, J. Zhukova, L. Logan, J. Twomey, K. Khatun, M. D'Cruz, C.M. Turner, N.C (2023) Capivasertib (C) and fulvestrant (F) for patients (pts) with aromatase inhibitor (AI)-resistant HR+/HER2-advanced breast cancer (ABC): Characterization and management of common adverse events (AEs) from the phase 3 CAPItello-291 trial.
Chia, S. Neven, P. Ciruelos, E.M. Lerebours, F. Ruiz-Borrego, M. Drullinsky, P. Prat, A. Park, Y.H. Juric, D. Turner, N.C. Chattar, Y. Patino, H. Akdere, M. Rugo, H.S (2023) Alpelisib plus endocrine therapy in patients with <i>PIK3CA</i>-mutated, hormone receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative, advanced breast cancer: Analysis of all 3 cohorts of the BYLieve study.
Okines, A.F.C. Braybrooke, J. MacPherson, I.R. Sutherland, S. Howell, S.J. Wheatley, D. Waters, S. Roylance, R. Baird, R.D. Oikonomidou, O. Palmieri, C. Harries, M. Harper-Wynne, C. Sheri, A. Khan, S. Bunce, C. Mohammed, K. Lee, D. Turner, N.C (2023) Randomised open-label phase II study of induction standard of care fulvestrant and CDK4/ 6 inhibition with addition of ipatasertib in metastatic ER+/HER2-breast cancer patients without circulating tumour (ct) DNA suppression (FAIM).