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A Study to Examine the Value of Broad Agnostic Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) Panel Testing Versus Reimbursed Organ-directed NGS: a Belgian Precision Study of the BSMO in Collaboration With the Cancer Center

Primary Purpose

Metastatic Cancer, Local Tumor Invasion

Status
Unknown status
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Belgium
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
NGS testing
Sponsored by
The Belgian Society of Medical Oncology
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional other trial for Metastatic Cancer

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • 1- Adult patients (18 years and above)
  • 2- Patients with metastatic solid tumors that are candidates for systemic therapy (early lines are preferred). Numbers will be capped for frequent tumor types (breast cancer: 150 patients, NSCLC: 150 patients, colorectal cancer: 150 patients). There will be a cohort of 200 patients with rare tumors or tumors with rare histology (Eur. J. Cancer 2011; 47: 2493-2511). Patients will be recruited as they appear in clinical practice.

    3- Patients will be enrolled following three clinical scenarios: a) patients eligible for local NGS testing (reimbursed or local practice); b) patients that are not eligible for reimbursed or local NGS testing; c) patients with no sufficient archival tissue meeting the pre-requirements will only undergo FMI liquid biopsy testing (exploratory cohort). That last cohort will be capped at 100 patients and will not have more than 50% of patients with the same tumor type.

    4- Patients enrolled in scenario a) and b) must have enough tissue from a metastatic (preferred) or primary lesion biopsy for local testing and FMI testing. The tissue should not be more than 3 years-old and fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin. Availability of metastatic biopsies performed after a previous therapy line are mandatory for patients treated with therapies that are known to induce acquired mechanisms of resistance (EGFR TKIs in NSCLC, aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer, TKIs in Gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST)…). Bone biopsies that undergo decalcification are not allowed.

    5- Patient showing an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status of ≤ 2.

    6- Patients can only be enrolled if they are also concomitantly registered in the Precision 1 study and the investigator agrees to subsequent registration of genotype-driven treatments given and the investigator assessed outcome on these treatments (RR and PFS).

    7- Patients able to provide written informed consent prior to enrollment into a potential subsequent clinical trial.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • 1- Life expectancy of less than 12 weeks.
  • 2- Inability to comply with protocol procedures.
  • 3- Known presence of severe hematopoietic, renal, and/or hepatic dysfunction (according to the local PI).

    4- - No informed consent provided.

  • 5- Patient is not enrolled and followed as provided in Precision 1.

Sites / Locations

  • ZNARecruiting
  • GZA
  • AZ KlinaRecruiting
  • Institute Jules BordetRecruiting
  • AZ VUBRecruiting
  • Les Cliniques Universitaires St LucRecruiting
  • Grand Hôpital de CharleroiRecruiting
  • Universitaire Ziekenhuis AntwerpenRecruiting
  • UZ GentRecruiting
  • Jessa Ziekenhuis
  • CHU Sart-TilmanRecruiting
  • AZ Nikolaas

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm 3

Arm Type

Other

Other

Experimental

Arm Label

Foundation medicine NGS in parallel with local NGS

Foundation Medicine NGS

LB Foundation Medicine NGS test

Arm Description

The patient will have in parallel FMI NGS test and Local reimbursed NGS test.

The patient will have only FMI NGS test.

The patient do not have enough biopsy material or have tumor not accessible for a biopsy will have a liquid biopsy Foundation Medicine test.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Number/prevalence of level 1, 2, 3 and 4 alterations as per OncoKB using comprehensive panel testing versus "real-word" practice in the three cohorts included.
Number/prevalence of alterations by type using Foundation Medicine testing. Descriptive results will also be presented by tumor type.
Percentage of patients with successful comprehensive panel testing

Secondary Outcome Measures

Prevalence of level 1, 2, 3 and 4 alterations as per OncoKB detected using liquid biopsies.
Percentage of patients with a treatment recommandation based on a liquid biopsy

Full Information

First Posted
October 28, 2020
Last Updated
May 27, 2021
Sponsor
The Belgian Society of Medical Oncology
Collaborators
Foundation Medicine, Sciensano, Roche Pharma AG
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT04641676
Brief Title
A Study to Examine the Value of Broad Agnostic Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) Panel Testing Versus Reimbursed Organ-directed NGS: a Belgian Precision Study of the BSMO in Collaboration With the Cancer Center
Official Title
A Study to Examine the Value of Broad Agnostic NGS Panel Testing Versus Reimbursed Organ-directed NGS: a Belgian Precision Study of the BSMO in Collaboration With the Cancer Center
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
May 2021
Overall Recruitment Status
Unknown status
Study Start Date
October 9, 2020 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
September 15, 2022 (Anticipated)
Study Completion Date
December 31, 2022 (Anticipated)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Sponsor
Name of the Sponsor
The Belgian Society of Medical Oncology
Collaborators
Foundation Medicine, Sciensano, Roche Pharma AG

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
No

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
Title of the study A study to examine the value of broad agnostic NGS panel testing versus reimbursed organ-directed NGS: a Belgian Precision study of the BSMO in collaboration with the Cancer Centre Study Number BSMO 2020-1 Study Phase Exploratory Sponsor Belgian Society of medical Oncology (BSMO) Treatment None Background and Rationale Several drugs targeting mutated gene products in cancer cells are available to Belgian patients through reimbursement of the drugs and, soon, by reimbursed organ-specific genomic testing. This context is unfavorable with regard to the following issues: Many more additional drugs with sound scientific rationale and preclinical evidence are available through clinical trials. The relevant genes are generally not included in the reimbursed NGS and ad hoc identification of such patients is extremely difficult and thus severely hampering the accrual in such trials. This denies patients a potential access to innovative treatments from which they could benefit and hampers progress. The same genes can be mutated in other cancer types, other than the reimbursed context, but are not detected due to the organ-specific approach in reimbursed NGS. Examination of these genes with an agnostic approach would give these other patients potential access to the drugs (via various routes, including clinical trials or medical need or otherwise) The broader panels applied by some Belgian platforms (50-100 genes), sometimes in an agnostic approach, do not cover all potentially actionable genes or not all types of actionable variants in these genes. Rearrangements which are highly actionable are not systematically covered in NGS testing, but rely on immunohistochemistry (if done at all) of fusion panels testing that requires additional funding. The various Belgian NGS labs use accredited but heterogeneous methodology and it has been reported that the detection rate of some mutations varies from one site to another. Therefore, from a patient and oncologist point of view there are current deficiencies that jeopardize optimal access of patients to current or novel genome-driven therapies. Defective identification of sensitive patients limits the implementation of clinical trials and their accrual rates and therefore the attractiveness of Belgium for such trials. There are more comprehensive commercial platforms that cover a large set of actionable genes (up to hundreds of genes) and the various types of mutations in these genes: sequence mutations, rearrangements, resulting in fusion genes, and gene amplifications. These commercial vendors have adequate comprehensive methodology but are too expensive (at their current public pricing) for general application. One of these is the platform of Foundation Medicine that builds on a large experience in variant annotation in the US and includes probably all current actionable targets including gene mutations, fusions, MSI, and TMB, all at once in one result. They also report actionability and established or clinical trial treatment options. To oncologists this is very attractive compared to the fragmented, sequential and very limited current reimbursed conditions. The investigators estimate that up to 20% of advanced cancer patients could get access to genotype-based treatment that are not covered by the organ-based reimbursement based access to NGS. This can be in the form of off-label application of reimbursed drugs, pharma-sponsored drug development trials that address a specific genotype or pharma sponsored or academic basket trials. Without broad agnostic testing the identification of eligible patients remains extremely difficult. A recent study [A study of genetic characteristics and suitability for targeted cancer treatment (TARGET)] showed that the rate of detection of actionable mutations increased from 28% with local testing to 66% with Foundation Medicine testing. Objectives To determine the added value of comprehensive and agnostic NGS versus "real-world" practice ("real-world" practice means local testing, no reimbursement for local testing and/or no accessible metastatic lesion) in providing patients with advanced/metastatic solid tumors access molecular guided therapy and/or immunotherapy based on genomic results. To describe the landscape of genomic alterations detected by reimbursed NGS To describe he landscape of genomic alterations detected by comprehensive panel testing To assess the technical success of comprehensive panel testing To describe the uptake of treatments recommended by the molecular tumor board guided by the genomic testing.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Metastatic Cancer, Local Tumor Invasion

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Other
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Sequential Assignment
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Non-Randomized
Enrollment
1000 (Anticipated)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Foundation medicine NGS in parallel with local NGS
Arm Type
Other
Arm Description
The patient will have in parallel FMI NGS test and Local reimbursed NGS test.
Arm Title
Foundation Medicine NGS
Arm Type
Other
Arm Description
The patient will have only FMI NGS test.
Arm Title
LB Foundation Medicine NGS test
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
The patient do not have enough biopsy material or have tumor not accessible for a biopsy will have a liquid biopsy Foundation Medicine test.
Intervention Type
Diagnostic Test
Intervention Name(s)
NGS testing
Intervention Description
NGS test will be performed
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Number/prevalence of level 1, 2, 3 and 4 alterations as per OncoKB using comprehensive panel testing versus "real-word" practice in the three cohorts included.
Time Frame
through study completion, an average of 1 year
Title
Number/prevalence of alterations by type using Foundation Medicine testing. Descriptive results will also be presented by tumor type.
Time Frame
through study completion, an average of 1 year
Title
Percentage of patients with successful comprehensive panel testing
Time Frame
through study completion, an average of 1 year
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Prevalence of level 1, 2, 3 and 4 alterations as per OncoKB detected using liquid biopsies.
Time Frame
through study completion, an average of 1 year
Title
Percentage of patients with a treatment recommandation based on a liquid biopsy
Time Frame
through study completion, an average of 1 year

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: 1- Adult patients (18 years and above) 2- Patients with metastatic solid tumors that are candidates for systemic therapy (early lines are preferred). Numbers will be capped for frequent tumor types (breast cancer: 150 patients, NSCLC: 150 patients, colorectal cancer: 150 patients). There will be a cohort of 200 patients with rare tumors or tumors with rare histology (Eur. J. Cancer 2011; 47: 2493-2511). Patients will be recruited as they appear in clinical practice. 3- Patients will be enrolled following three clinical scenarios: a) patients eligible for local NGS testing (reimbursed or local practice); b) patients that are not eligible for reimbursed or local NGS testing; c) patients with no sufficient archival tissue meeting the pre-requirements will only undergo FMI liquid biopsy testing (exploratory cohort). That last cohort will be capped at 100 patients and will not have more than 50% of patients with the same tumor type. 4- Patients enrolled in scenario a) and b) must have enough tissue from a metastatic (preferred) or primary lesion biopsy for local testing and FMI testing. The tissue should not be more than 3 years-old and fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin. Availability of metastatic biopsies performed after a previous therapy line are mandatory for patients treated with therapies that are known to induce acquired mechanisms of resistance (EGFR TKIs in NSCLC, aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer, TKIs in Gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST)…). Bone biopsies that undergo decalcification are not allowed. 5- Patient showing an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status of ≤ 2. 6- Patients can only be enrolled if they are also concomitantly registered in the Precision 1 study and the investigator agrees to subsequent registration of genotype-driven treatments given and the investigator assessed outcome on these treatments (RR and PFS). 7- Patients able to provide written informed consent prior to enrollment into a potential subsequent clinical trial. Exclusion Criteria: 1- Life expectancy of less than 12 weeks. 2- Inability to comply with protocol procedures. 3- Known presence of severe hematopoietic, renal, and/or hepatic dysfunction (according to the local PI). 4- - No informed consent provided. 5- Patient is not enrolled and followed as provided in Precision 1.
Central Contact Person:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
Maïté de Hemptinne
Phone
+32 4 74 56 73 88
Email
maite.dehemptinne@sciensano.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
Gordana Raicevic Toungouz
Phone
+32 4 76 97 34 06
Email
Gordana.RaicevicToungouz@sciensano.be
Facility Information:
Facility Name
ZNA
City
Antwerp
ZIP/Postal Code
2020
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Abdelbari Baitar
Phone
+32 3 280 31 30
Email
abdelbari.baitar@zna.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Myriam Mertens
Phone
+32 3 280 31 30
Email
myriam.mertens@zna.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Joanna Vermeij, Dr
Facility Name
GZA
City
Antwerp
ZIP/Postal Code
2610
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Not yet recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Jo Horemans
Phone
+32 3 443 37 59
Email
jo.horemans@gza.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Luc Dirix, Dr
Facility Name
AZ Klina
City
Brasschaat
ZIP/Postal Code
2930
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Charis Loos
Phone
+32 3 650 53 99
Email
Charis.Loos@klina.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Wim Demey, Dr
Facility Name
Institute Jules Bordet
City
Brussels
ZIP/Postal Code
1000
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Fanny Bustin
Phone
+32 2 541 32 20
Email
fanny.bustin@bordet.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Sylvie Bartholomeus
Phone
+32 2 541 32 20
Email
sylvie.bartholomeus@bordet.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Philippe Aftimos, Dr
Facility Name
AZ VUB
City
Brussels
ZIP/Postal Code
1090
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Vanessa Fastenaekels
Phone
+32 2 474 94 78
Email
Vanessa.Fastenaekels@uzbrussel.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Malika Tahiri
Phone
+32 2 474 94 78
Email
Malika.Tahiri@uzbrussel.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Lore Decoster, Dr
Facility Name
Les Cliniques Universitaires St Luc
City
Brussels
ZIP/Postal Code
1200
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Valérie Decroës
Phone
+32 2 764 42 97
Email
valerie.decroes@uclouvain.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Cédric Van Marcke de Lummen, MD
Facility Name
Grand Hôpital de Charleroi
City
Charleroi
ZIP/Postal Code
6000
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Stéphanie Warnon
Phone
+32 71 10 47 47
Email
Stephanie.WARNON@ghdc.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Matthias Papier
Phone
+32 71 10 47 47
Email
matthias.papier@ghdc.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Jean-Luc Canon, Dr
Facility Name
Universitaire Ziekenhuis Antwerpen
City
Edegem
ZIP/Postal Code
2650
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Greet De Craen
Phone
+32 3 821 41 21
Email
Greet.DeCraen@uza.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Marc Peeters, Dr
Facility Name
UZ Gent
City
Gent
ZIP/Postal Code
9000
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Lore Vansteelant
Phone
+32 9 332 57 93
Email
Lore.Vansteelant@UZGENT.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Sylvie Rottey, PhD
Facility Name
Jessa Ziekenhuis
City
Hasselt
ZIP/Postal Code
3500
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Not yet recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Ann Tullen
Phone
+32 11 33 79 91
Email
ann.tullen@jessazh.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Jeroen Mebis, Dr
Facility Name
CHU Sart-Tilman
City
Liège
ZIP/Postal Code
4000
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Hélène Schroeder
Phone
+3243668203
Email
hschroeder@chuliege.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Astrid Collinge
Phone
+3243668203
Email
acollinge@chuliege.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Joelle Collignon, Dr
Facility Name
AZ Nikolaas
City
Sint-Niklaas
ZIP/Postal Code
9100
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Not yet recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Willem Lybaert, Dr

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
Undecided

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A Study to Examine the Value of Broad Agnostic Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) Panel Testing Versus Reimbursed Organ-directed NGS: a Belgian Precision Study of the BSMO in Collaboration With the Cancer Center

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