Abstract

e14550 Background: Endocrine therapy is the standard of care treatment for patients with estrogen-receptor positive advanced breast cancer, owing to improved tolerability and comparable efficacy to that of cytotoxic chemotherapy. Half of such cancers will progress through first line therapy (primary endocrine resistance) and half will progress after an initial period of disease control (secondary or acquired endocrine resistance). A significant challenge is to test for and identify biomarkers which can guide the likely success of endocrine therapy as a single agent or in combination with small molecule inhibitors.This is particularly challenging where metastatic deposits reside at sites where biopsy is difficult. Potential biomarkers indicative of resistance to endocrine therapy have been identified and can be detected in circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA). CtDNA is shed from tumours and is detectable in a cancer patient’s bloodstream. Information on mutational profiles can guide an oncologist in the selection of targeted therapy in addition to hormonal therapy. Methods: We have analysed formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded(FFPE) tumour samples and longitudinal liquid biopsies from 19 patients who were treated with fulvestrant in combination with a novel inhibitor of the PIK3CA/AKT pathway with next-generation sequencing using a targeted 44-gene panel. Mutations identified using this technique were tracked during the course of treatment using droplet-digital PCR(ddPCR). Results: 57 samples were tested using a 44-gene panel; 19 FFPE tumour samples and matched ctDNA samples were obtained prior therapy and ctDNA samples at disease progression. Mutations detected in PIK3CA, AKT1, ESR1and TP53 genes were trackable in longitudinal ctDNA samples using ddPCR. The association between ctDNA dynamics and outcome will be presented. Conclusions: Multiple mutations that enable the early detection of treatment failure and resistance can be tracked in ctDNA. Investigating the clinical utility of ctDNA is paramount.

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