This collaborative screening protocol, developed by the Lung Cancer Mutation Consortium (LCMC) and supported by the Thoracic Surgery Oncology Group (TSOG), is designed to determine the feasibility of comprehensive molecular profiling to detect actionable oncogenic drivers in patients with suspected early stage lung cancers scheduled to undergo biopsies to establish the diagnosis of lung cancer. The primary purpose of this testing is to determine the presence of 12 oncogenic drivers (mutations in EGFR, BRAFV600E , MET exon 14, KRAS G12C and HER2, rearrangements in ALK, RET, NTRK, EGFR exon 20 insertion and ROS1, and amplification of MET and HER2) that can serve as targets making patients eligible for upcoming targeted neoadjuvant therapy trials. The ultimate goal is to use this information from the screening process to select the optimal neoadjuvant therapy and wherever possible enroll patients onto separate neoadjuvant therapy trials with genomically matched treatments or other appropriate trials if no actionable driver mutation is detected. Thoracic Surgery Oncology Group (TSOG) is a network of surgeons within North American Thoracic Surgery Academic Centers aligned with the goal of enhancing patient care through administration of multi-site trials focused on recent advances in lung cancer. TSOG has aligned with the LCMC4 sites to enroll the LCRF-LEADER screening trial. TSOG's involvement will be essential in trial enrollment and ultimate interpretation of the multimodal clinical and translational data collected as part of this study. We estimate we will detect an actionable oncogenic driver in 33% of cases. The remaining 66% of patients will represent a cohort identified by their care teams as candidates for other potential neoadjuvant therapies which may include checkpoint inhibitors such as atezolizumab, durvalumab, nivolumab, and pembrolizumab or other novel agents. The targeted therapy treatment trials will be conducted independently of the LCRF-LEADER screening trial, evaluating for efficacy. If none of the 10 oncogenic drivers are detected, the patient will be offered participation in any clinical trial of neoadjuvant therapy available at their treating institution or standard of care therapy. For patients not enrolled on a targeted treatment trial, circulating tumor DNA in blood (ctDNA) will be collected at 3 time points: before neoadjuvant treatment, after neoadjuvant treatment but before surgery, and after surgery. This initiative will be correlated with various clinical outcomes. Prespecified clinical data will be collected for correlation with these circulating biomarkers.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,000
Testing for actionable oncogenic drivers
University of California, Davis
Davis, California, United States
RECRUITINGUSC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center
Los Angeles, California, United States
RECRUITINGUCLA
Los Angeles, California, United States
RECRUITINGSt. Joseph's Hospital Orange
Orange, California, United States
RECRUITINGMoffitt Cancer Center
Tampa, Florida, United States
RECRUITINGNorthwestern University
Chicago, Illinois, United States
RECRUITINGMassachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
RECRUITINGBrigham and Women's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
RECRUITINGBoston Medical Center
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
RECRUITINGDana-Farber Cancer Institute
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
RECRUITING...and 11 more locations
Proportion of Patients who Possess Actionable Oncogenic Drivers
The primary outcome measure is the determination of the proportion of patients with stage IA2-III lung cancers who possess actionable oncogenic drivers. A patient is considered to have a actionable oncogenic driver if they have any of the following 10 genomic alterations: ALK rearrangements, BRAFV600E mutations, EGFR sensitizing mutations, HER2 mutation, HER2 amplification, MET amplification, MET exon 14 mutation, RET rearrangements, NTRK rearrangement, or ROS1 rearrangements.
Time frame: 8 weeks
Tumor Mutation Burden (TMB) Assessment
Measure TMB in all patient tumor samples (Mutations per megabase)
Time frame: 8 weeks
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