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Pan-Cancer Prevalence of Microsatellite Instability-High (MSI-H) Identified by Circulating Tumor DNA and Associated Real-World Clinical Outcomes

Pashtoon Murtaza Kasi, Leslie Bucheit, Jiemin Liao, Jason S. Starr, Pedro C. Barata, Samuel J. Klempner, David R. Gandara, Ardaman Shergill, Luciana Madeira da Silva, Caroline Weipert, Nicole Zhang, Christopher R. Pretz, Aaron Hardin, Lesli A. Kiedrowski, Justin I. Odegaard

2023JCO Precision Oncology19 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: Immune checkpoint inhibitors are approved for advanced solid tumors with microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H). Although several technologies can assess MSI-H status, detection and outcomes with circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA)-detected MSI-H are lacking. As such, we examined pan-cancer MSI-H prevalence across 21 cancers and outcomes after ctDNA-detected MSI-H. METHODS: Patients with advanced cancer who had ctDNA testing (Guardant360) from October 1, 2018, to June 30, 2022, were retrospectively assessed for prevalence. GuardantINFORM, which includes anonymized genomic and structured payer claims data, was queried to assess outcomes. Patients who initiated new treatment within 90 days of MSI-H detection were sorted into immunotherapy included in treatment (IO) or no immunotherapy included (non-IO) groups. Real-world time to treatment discontinuation (rwTTD) and real-world time to next treatment (rwTTNT) were assessed in months as proxies of progression-free survival (PFS); real-world overall survival (rwOS) was assessed in months. Cox regression tests analyzed differences. Colorectal cancer, non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), prostate cancer, gastroesophageal cancer, and uterine cancer (UC) were assessed independently; all other cancers were grouped. RESULTS: = .004); however, there was a consistent trend toward prolonged OS in IO-treated patients. CONCLUSION: These data support use of a well-validated ctDNA assay to detect MSI-H across solid tumors and suggest prolonged PFS in patients treated with IO-containing regimens after detection. Tumor-agnostic, ctDNA-based MSI testing may be reliable for rapid decision making.

Topics & Concepts

Microsatellite instabilityInternal medicineCancerMicrosatelliteOncologyMedicineGeneticsBiologyGeneAlleleCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsGenetic factors in colorectal cancer