Non-Invasive Blood Test Helps Determine Best Treatment for Advanced GI Stromal Tumors

For immediate release
January 23, 2023

Contact

Rachel Facci
571-4831-684

“It is increasingly recognized that somatic mutations in cancer evolve over time and can lead to drug resistance. We need tools other than traditional invasive biopsies to evaluate the mutational landscape in order to personalize therapies in real time. The team of INTRIGUE investigators has discovered that specific mutations identified in ctDNA of patients with advanced GIST may predict their response to second-line treatments. If confirmed in future studies, this approach could be practice changing.”
Dr. Pamela Kunz, ASCO Expert in Gastrointestinal Cancer

A non-invasive blood test may help to determine the most effective treatment for patients with advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) that has progressed or is intolerant to first-line imatinib. These results will be presented during the January 2023 session of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Plenary Series.

Approximately 80% of patients with GIST have primary mutations in KIT. Imatinib is effective against KIT-mutated GIST, but the vast majority of patients with GIST will ultimately develop resistance to imatinib, most commonly due to the development of secondary mutations in KIT. Sunitinib is effective against some imatinib-resistant mutations.

In the phase 3 INTRIGUE trial, 453 adult patients with advanced GIST who no longer benefited from or had intolerance to imatinib were randomized to ripretinib or sunitinib.[1] In this study, researchers conducted an exploratory baseline analysis of the circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) results from INTRIGUE to detect secondary mutations in the kinase domain of KIT. ctDNA is DNA released by cancerous cells into the blood stream.

Eighty-percent (362 of 453) of samples from the INTRIGUE trial were analyzed. ctDNA was detected in 77% (280 out of 362) of analyzed patients and of those patients, 76% (213 out of 280) were found to have KIT-mutated GIST. Patients with KIT exon 11 + 17/18 (−9/13/14) mutations had superior progression-free survival (PFS), objective response rate (ORR), and overall survival (OS) when treated with ripretinib, while patients with KIT exon 11 + 13/14 (−9/17/18) mutations had better PFS, ORR, and OS when treated with sunitinib.

“This non-invasive blood test may be a highly meaningful tool to select the most effective drug in patients with GIST who progressed while receiving the first-line treatment with imatinib,” said Sebastian Bauer, MD, from University Hospital Essen in Essen, Germany and lead author of the study. “Our analysis shows that patients with concurrent mutations in KIT exons 11 + 17/18 in the absence of other mutations showed even better overall survival when treated with ripretinib compared to those treated with sunitinib. We plan to validate these data in a new, pivotal phase 3 study. Apart from that, the magnitude of this difference suggests plasma testing to become part of routine care for patients with GIST in the future.”  

View the abstract or join the session on January 24, 2023, at 3:00 pm ET (session will be recorded and available on demand)

View Expert Disclosures

View Author Disclosures

View ASCO press release on previous findings from INTRUIGE, presented during the January 2022 ASCO Plenary Series

ATTRIBUTION TO THE ASCO PLENARY SERIES IS REQUESTED IN ALL COVERAGE.

###

About ASCO: 

Founded in 1964, the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Inc. (ASCO®) is committed to making a world of difference in cancer care. As the world’s leading organization of its kind, ASCO represents nearly 45,000 oncology professionals who care for people living with cancer. Through research, education, and promotion of the highest-quality patient care, ASCO works to conquer cancer and create a world where cancer is prevented or cured, and every survivor is healthy. ASCO is supported by its affiliate organization, the Conquer Cancer Foundation. Learn more at www.ASCO.org, explore patient education resources at www.Cancer.Net, and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and YouTube.