Next-generation sequencing of circulating tumor DNA can optimize second-line treatment in RAS cwild-type metastatic colorectal cancer after progression on anti-EGFR Therapy: time to rethink our approach
Authors
Mauri, DKamposioras, Konstantinos
Matthaios, D.
Tolia, M
Nixon, I
Dambrosio, M
Zarkavelis, G
Papadimitriou, K.
Petricevic, B.
Kountourakis, P
Kopecky, J.
Grasic Kuhar, C
Popovic, L
Amylidi, A. L.
Valachis, A
Chilingirova, N. P.
De, Mello, RA
Dedic Plavetic, N
Katsanos, K
Mostert, B.
Alongi, F
De Bari, B
Corradini, S
Kampletsas, E
Gazouli, I.
Gkoura, S.
Affiliation
Department of Medical Oncology, University of Ιoannina, Ιoannina, GreeceIssue Date
2022
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
"Background: Management of Ras wild-type colorectal cancer (CRC) patients upon disease progression after the successful use of targeted treatment with anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies and backbone chemotherapy remains a clinical challenge. Summary: Development of treatment resistance with prevalence of preexisting RAS mutated clones, RAS mutation conversion, truncation of extracellular receptor domains as well as HER2 and MET amplification are molecular events that can be difficult to follow without the use of sophisticated laboratory techniques. The clinical hurdle of re-biopsy and tumor heterogeneity can be overcome by the implementation of next-generation sequencing (NGS) to analyze circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) and identify druggable mutations or recovery of RAS-wildness. In this opinion paper, we summarize with critical thinking the clinical approach to be followed after the failure of first-line treatment in Ras wild-type CRC tumors with the use of NGS. Rechallenge with anti-EGFR inhibitors, in case of persistent or recovery of RAS-wildness, and targeted approach of specific mutations (BRAF inhibitors), amplifications (anti-Her2 treatment), or fusion proteins (NTRK inhibitors) can by guided by the use of NGS. The use of NGS platforms for serial analysis of ctDNA is an important step to better understand the molecular landscape of metastatic CRC and guide clinical decisions. Key messages: NGS should be considered a mainstay in clinical practice for the management of CRC patients and health authorities should consider reimbursing its use in the appropriate clinical settings."Citation
Mauri, D., Kamposioras, Konstatinos, Matthaios, D, Tolia, M, Nixon, I, Dambrosio, M, Zarkavelis, G, Papadimitriou, K, Petricevic, B, Kountourakis, P., Kopecky, J, Grašič Kuhar, C, Popovic, L. et al Next-generation sequencing of circulating tumor DNA can optimize second-line treatment in RAS wild-type metastatic colorectal cancer after cprogression on anti-EGFR therapy: Time to rethink our approach . Oncology Research and Treatment. 2022Journal
Oncology Research and TreatmentDOI
10.1159/000521845PubMed ID
34999585Additional Links
https://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000521845Type
ArticleLanguage
enae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1159/000521845