Read more

June 04, 2016
5 min read
Save

Metastatic breast cancer research initiative benefits from direct-to-patient recruitment

You've successfully added to your alerts. You will receive an email when new content is published.

Click Here to Manage Email Alerts

We were unable to process your request. Please try again later. If you continue to have this issue please contact customerservice@slackinc.com.

CHICAGO — A direct-to-patient-approach rapidly identified a large number of patients with metastatic breast cancer willing to share tumor and saliva samples and medical records to accelerate research, according to data presented at the ASCO Annual Meeting.

Patients recruited through this approach included many with rare phenotypes, a group difficult to identify through traditional approaches, according to the researchers.

Nikhil Wagle

Nikhil Wagle

“An estimated 150,000 women and men in the United States are living with metastatic breast cancer,” Nikhil Wagle, MD, assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, physician at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and associate member of the Broad Institute, said during a press conference. “The median survival is about 3 years, and more than 40,000 people die annually, accounting for 7% of all U.S. cancer deaths. Although treatments are improving, metastatic breast cancer is currently not curable. In order to make advances in our understanding of metastatic breast cancer, we need to be able to study tumor specimens — ideally, tumor specimens that are linked to clinical information.”

The majority of patients with metastatic breast cancer are treated at community medical centers, which has impeded genomic research of the condition.

Wagle and colleagues initiated The Metastatic Breast Cancer Project, a nationwide study that encouraged patients to share samples and medical records in an effort to hasten research.

The researchers collaborated with patients and advocacy groups to develop a website allowing patients located across the United States to participate. Enrolled patients received a saliva kit and were asked to return a saliva sample to extract germline DNA.

The researchers then contacted the participants’ medical providers to obtain medical records and tumor biopsy samples. They used biopsy samples and the extracted germline DNA to perform whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing, with clinically annotated genomic data used to identify mechanisms of response and resistance to therapies.

The collected data has been dispersed widely among researchers, with discoveries regularly shared with study participants.

In the 7 months since recruitment commenced, more than 2,000 participants have responded, representing all 50 U.S. states.

A total of 1,227 participants enrolled in the first 3 months; 96% (n = 1,178) of these initial participants completed a 16-question survey about their cancer and treatments.

Respondents had a median age of 54 years (range, 25-91) and a median time from initial diagnosis to metastasis of 2 years. A total of 424 patients received a diagnosis of de novo metastatic breast cancer.

Eighty-seven percent (n = 1,022) of patients reported undergoing a biopsy at or following their diagnosis of metastatic disease.

Eighty-seven respondents reported having metastatic breast cancer for more than 10 years. The median time from metastatic diagnosis for the entire cohort was 3 years.

Thirty-seven percent (n = 436) of respondents reported being on therapy for more than 2 years, with 57% (n = 672) reporting an “extraordinary response” to therapy. Long and/or extraordinary response occurred among 77 participants treated with capecitabine, 44 participants treated with platinum therapies and 20 participants treated with everolimus (Afinitor, Novartis).

Genomic analysis of patients reporting extraordinary responses, as well as those diagnosed with de novo metastatic breast cancer, are underway.

Initial medical records, tumor samples and saliva have been received.

“Partnering directly with patients through social media enables the rapid identification of thousands of patients willing to share tumor and saliva samples and medical records in order to accelerate research,” Wagle said. “In particular, this study enables the opportunity to study rare patients like exceptional responders, who are otherwise challenging to identify through traditional approaches. We intend this to be a shared resource for all researchers, so that all clinical and genomic data generated will be shared widely. We hope that this proof-of-concept study will serve as a model for patient-driven research in other cancer types.” – by Cameron Kelsall

Reference:

Wagle N, et al. Abstract LBA1519. Presented at: ASCO Annual Meeting; June 3-7, 2016; Chicago.

Disclosure: The Broad Institute funded this study. Wagle reports stock and other ownership interests with Foundation Medicine. Please see the abstract for a list of all other researchers’ relevant financial disclosures.