Concordance between Tumor and Germline BRCA Status in High-Grade Ovarian Carcinoma Patients in the Phase III PAOLA-1/ENGOT-ov25 Trial
Menée à partir d'échantillons tumoraux fixés au formaldéhyde et inclus en paraffine après prélèvement sur 1 176 patientes atteintes d'un carcinome de l'ovaire de haut grade et de stade avancé et menée à partir d'échantillons sanguins, cette étude française évalue la concordance entre le statut BRCA déterminé à partir des cellules tumorales et le statut BRCA déterminé à partir des cellules sanguines
Background : PAOLA1 is a phase III study assessing olaparib maintenance therapy in advanced high-grade ovarian carcinoma patients responding to first-line platinum-taxane-based chemotherapy plus bevacizumab as standard of care. Randomization was stratified by treatment outcome and tumor BRCA1/2 status (tBRCA) at screening.
Methods : tBRCA was tested on FFPE tumor blocks on 5 French platforms using 2 Next-Generation Sequencing methods based either on hybrid capture or amplicon technology. One of the exploratory objectives was to assess the concordance between germline (gBRCA) and tBRCA testing in French patients. gBRCA testing was performed on blood samples on the same platforms.
Results : From May 2015 to July 2017, tBRCA tests were performed for 1,176 screened patients. Only 52 (4.4%) tumor samples were non-contributive. The median interval between reception of the tumor sample and availability of the tBRCA status result was 37 days (range =8–260). A pathogenic variant (PV) was reported in 27.1% tumor samples (319 of 1,176 screened patients). tBRCA and gBRCA testing were both performed for 451 French patients with negative results for both tests in 306 patients (67.8%) and positive results for both tests in 85 patients (18.8%). Only one large genomic rearrangement of BRCA1 was detected, exclusively in the blood sample. Interestingly, tBRCA testing revealed 6.4% of PV (29 of 451) not detected by gBRCA testing.
Conclusions : tBRCA testing is an appropriate tool with an acceptable turnaround time for clinical practice and a low failure rate, ensuring reliable identification of patients likely to benefit from PARPi therapy.
Journal of the National Cancer Institute , résumé, 2019