NIH exceptional responders to cancer therapy study launched
The Exceptional Responders Initiative, a study to investigate the
molecular factors of tumors associated with exceptional treatment
responses of cancer patients to drug therapies, was launched today by
the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of
Health. Scientists will attempt to identify the molecular features of
tumors that predict whether or not a particular drug or class of drugs
will be beneficial. Investigators will examine tumor specimens from
patients in clinical trials who achieved an exceptional response
relative to other trial participants, or other patients who achieved an
exceptional and unexpected response to a non-investigational therapy.
This initiative was initially considered two years ago
when, through the use of advanced DNA sequencing methods, the molecular
basis for the prolonged remission of bladder cancer in a patient
following treatment with a molecularly targeted drug in a clinical
trial was determined. Researchers thought it might be possible to
understand the mechanism of drug response for a relatively small number
of patients in early phase clinical trials who benefit dramatically
from therapy. In the past, trials in which up to only 10 percent of
patients had significant and prolonged responses were considered
unsuccessful because it was not possible to understand why some
patients benefitted from treatment and others did not.
In treating patients with cancer, unexpected and
prolonged remissions following standard therapy can be observed; the
reasons why certain patients experience these remissions have been
unclear. If molecular markers could be developed that predict positive
responses to certain therapies, even in a small subset of patients, it
might be possible to more effectively choose treatment programs for
individual patients.
In this study, some of the tissue and clinical data from
exceptional responders will be obtained from NCI-supported trials as
well as potentially other clinical trials. The remaining samples and
data will come from standard therapy settings, such as community
practice, where there are reliable outcome data, and from pharmaceutical
industry trials or other sources. Consequently, letters of
solicitation are being sent to cancer centers and others clinicians
nationwide to ask them to assist in this effort.
DNA and RNA from tissue samples will be isolated at the
Biospecimen Core Resource at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus,
Ohio. Those isolates will then be shipped to a DNA sequencing and
analysis center at Baylor University, Houston.
“The feasibility of this approach is supported by
reports in the literature of relevant mutations in tumor specimens from
patients who experienced an exceptional response to a drug in a
clinical trial, even though that drug failed to meet the trial’s
endpoint for clinical benefit,” said Louis Staudt, Ph.D., M.D.,
director of the NCI Center for Cancer Genomics, a co-leader of this
study.
Ultimately, clinicians would like to use this
information to identify patients who may potentially respond to agents
with the same or similar mechanism of action. It may be difficult to
determine if abnormalities found in exceptional responders are
functionally significant and whether the abnormalities actually drive
tumor growth. Additionally, relevant mutations may be present in less
than 5 percent of tumors, making them difficult to identify.
“The increasing ability of molecular technologies to
stratify tumor types by prognosis or response to treatment will result
in many common cancers being separated into specific subtypes that may
respond to drugs in very different ways,” noted Barbara A. Conley,
M.D., Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis, NCI, and the other
co-lead investigator for the study. “The ability to identify molecular
markers that are able to predict a clinical response in these subsets
of patients will provide us with the tools to further advance our
ability to conduct studies consistent with the principles of precision
medicine.”
This exploratory study will also examine the feasibility
of conducting a larger exceptional responder study (especially given
what is expected to be a limited amount of tissue that can be collected
over the study period of three to four years). The output of this
initiative might include a list of plausible mutations, possible
mutations, or simply all the mutations found in the exceptional
responder cases.
Researchers hope other investigators will seek to build
on the data generated by this study by testing hypotheses on specimens
from a trial that used a particular drug, or by comparing their own
dataset with the shared data. Placing the full genomic annotation of
100 cases of exceptional responders in the public domain should aid all
clinicians and researchers looking for patterns in drug response.
Questions from investigators, physicians, and hospitals
looking to contribute tumor samples can be sent by email to the
Exceptional Responder’s email box at NCIExceptionalResponders@mail.nih.gov.
For more details about the Exceptional Responders initiative, please go to the Q&A at http://www.cancer.gov/newscenter/newsfromnci/2014/ExceptionalRespondersQandA. For details on this trial, #NCT02243592, please go to the Clinical Trials.gov page at https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02243592?term=NCT02243592&rank=1.
For other questions about this initiative or about
cancer, please call NCI's Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER
(1-800-422-6237).
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) leads the National
Cancer Program and the NIH efforts to dramatically reduce the
prevalence of cancer and improve the lives of cancer patients and their
families, through research into prevention and cancer biology, the
development of new interventions, and the training and mentoring of new
researchers. For more information about cancer, please visit the NCI
website at http://www.cancer.gov or call NCI's Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237).
About the National Institutes of Health (NIH):
NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and
Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting
basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is
investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare
diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.
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