CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Foundation Medicine, Inc. (NASDAQ:FMI) today announced the presentation of new findings at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting. The data supports the use of both tissue- and blood-based comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) to advance personalized cancer care and inform the use of targeted and immunotherapy treatment approaches. Presentations span several of Foundation Medicine’s suite of molecular information products including its recently FDA approved assay, FoundationOne CDx™, as well as FoundationOne®, FoundationACT® and the company’s novel blood-based assay to measure tumor mutational burden (bTMB).
The AACR Annual Meeting will be held April 14-18, 2018 at McCormick Place in Chicago, Illinois.
“Personalized oncology care is rapidly evolving, underscoring the need for the identification of new biomarkers that may help predict response to treatment and improve access to, and success of, targeted therapeutic trials in oncology,” said Vincent Miller, M.D., chief medical officer at Foundation Medicine. “As such, we are excited to present new data generated from the use of our suite of CGP tests at this year’s AACR meeting that advance both of these goals. These data identify novel genomic biomarkers of response to important new treatment options using either a tissue sample or a blood sample across a diverse range of tumor types, helping to demonstrate the broad impact CGP can have on advancing cancer care.”
In the area of immunotherapy, new data will be presented highlighting the use of Foundation Medicine’s bTMB assay, which is currently being utilized in a global clinical trial setting to investigate bTMB as a non-invasive biomarker of response to first-line atezolizumab in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients as part of Roche/Genentech’s prospective, randomized Phase III Blood First Assay Screening Trial (BFAST). Previously this assay was shown to be associated with response to the anti-PD-L1 immunotherapy agent, atezolizumab, in individuals with previously-treated NSCLC. New data to be presented at AACR builds on these findings, showing that: (a) high TMB is significantly associated with improved survival on atezolizumab versus chemotherapy in second-line NSCLC, (b) measurement of high TMB using Foundation Medicine’s assays in blood versus tissue is correlated with, and is largely explained by, shared variants present in both sample types, and (c) a sufficiently-sized assay is required to reliably characterize patients with high TMB.
Additional findings to be presented may help further guide the use of checkpoint inhibitor cancer immunotherapy. For example, one study found that tumor mutational burden (TMB), which has been shown to predict response to immunotherapy in many cancer types, varied between patients of different ancestries, suggesting that the likelihood of benefit from immunotherapy may differ in these patients as well. Another study, performed on the largest sequenced cohort of Merkel cell carcinoma to date, identified TMB-high and TMB-low subsets linked to distinct disease etiologies, providing evidence that TMB and or presence of the etiologic virus may help guide therapy in these patients.
Data generated utilizing the FoundationACT liquid biopsy assay will be presented, which supports its potential utility in predicting clinical outcomes. An oral presentation will highlight a retrospective analysis utilizing FoundationACT, as well as a custom liquid biopsy assay, to measure circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) from a Phase II study of metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (mTNBC), showing that on-treatment quantitative changes in genomic alterations were associated with clinical outcomes to a targeted therapy/chemotherapy treatment combination.
Clinical validation data for FoundationOne CDx will also be presented, demonstrating high concordance with multiple FDA-approved companion diagnostics, as well as other assays, including another CLIA-validated next generation sequencing assay and other single marker assays, currently used to identify targeted therapies in patients with NSCLC, melanoma, colorectal cancer, ovarian cancer, and breast cancer.
Other studies include those that identify novel biomarkers of targeted therapy treatment response, such as novel PTEN alterations in metastatic triple negative breast cancer (mTNBC), or genomic loss of heterozygosity in non-BRCA positive ovarian cancer patients. Such findings could be used to broaden intent-to-treat populations in clinical trials and identify larger patient populations that may respond to approved treatments.
Following is a list of abstracts that will be presented at the meeting.
Presentation # |
Title |
Day/Time |
Location |
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Immunotherapy/TMB |
||||||||||||
PO.EP01.04 |
Somatic genome alterations in cancer as compared to inferred patient ancestry |
April 16; |
Poster Section 10 | |||||||||
CTPL03-CT077 (Oral Presentation) |
Nivolumab (nivo) + ipilimumab (ipi) vs platinum-doublet chemotherapy (PT-DC) as first-line (1L) treatment (tx) for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC): initial results from CheckMate 227 |
April 16;
|
N Hall B | |||||||||
CTPL03-CT078 (Oral Presentation) |
Tumor mutational burden (TMB) as a biomarker for clinical benefit from dual immune checkpoint blockade with nivolumab (nivo) + ipilimumab (ipi) in first-line (1L) non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC): identification of TMB cutoff from CheckMate 568 |
April 16;
12:05pm- |
N Hall B | |||||||||
PO.TB11.02 |
Comprehensive genomic profiling of Merkel cell carcinoma samples reveals bimodal distribution of tumor mutational burden and two mutually exclusive candidate mechanisms of carcinogenesis |
April 17; |
Poster Section 1 | |||||||||
PO.IM02.04 |
A Blood Based Next Generation Sequencing Assay to Determine Tumor Mutational Burden (bTMB) Is Associated with Benefit to an Anti-PD-L1 Inhibitor, Atezolizumab |
April 18; |
Poster Section 32 | |||||||||
Liquid Biopsy & Targeted Therapy |
||||||||||||
PO.ET04.05 |
Identification of potential resistance mechanisms to EGFR treatment in the real world using a clinicogenomic database |
April 16; |
Poster Section 36 | |||||||||
MS.CL10.02 (Oral Presentation) |
On-treatment changes in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) level as an early predictor of clinical outcome in the LOTUS randomized phase II trial of first-line ipatasertib (IPAT) plus paclitaxel (PAC) for metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (mTNBC) |
April 16; |
Room S406 | |||||||||
PO.CL10.02 |
A novel PI3K/Akt-pathway activation biomarker using comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) for clinical trial assay |
April 16; |
Poster Section 25 | |||||||||
PO.MCB09.03 |
Novel CDH1 mutations in breast invasive lobular carcinoma |
April 16; |
Poster Section 16 | |||||||||
PO.CL10.06 |
A validated diagnostic assay for identifying patients with ovarian cancer with high genomic loss of heterozygosity (LOH) without deleterious BRCA mutations |
April 17; |
Poster Section 24 | |||||||||
FoundationOne CDx |
||||||||||||
PO.MCB09.02 |
Comparative analysis of clinically validated NGS-based assays reveals high concordance across short variants |
April 15; |
Poster Section 19 | |||||||||
PO.CL01.03 |
An ERBB2 follow-on companion diagnostic for clinical care of patients with breast cancer |
April 16; |
Poster Section 27 | |||||||||
PO.SHP01.01 |
A clinically-validated comprehensive companion diagnostic platform for care of patients with advanced cancer |
April 17; |
Poster Section 35 | |||||||||
About Foundation Medicine
Foundation Medicine (NASDAQ:FMI)
is a molecular information company dedicated to a transformation in
cancer care in which treatment is informed by a deep understanding of
the genomic changes that contribute to each patient's unique cancer. The
company offers a full suite of comprehensive genomic profiling assays to
identify the molecular alterations in a patient's cancer and match them
with relevant targeted therapies, immunotherapies and clinical trials.
Foundation Medicine’s molecular information platform aims to improve
day-to-day care for patients by serving the needs of clinicians,
academic researchers and drug developers to help advance the science of
molecular medicine in cancer. For more information, please visit http://www.FoundationMedicine.com
or follow Foundation Medicine on Twitter (@FoundationATCG).
Foundation Medicine®, FoundationOne®, and FoundationACT® are registered trademarks and FoundationOne CDx™ is a trademark of Foundation Medicine, Inc.
Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements for Foundation
Medicine
This press release contains "forward-looking
statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995, including, but not limited to, statements regarding
the value and impact of CGP, including FoundationOne, FoundationACT and
FoundationOne CDx, and molecular information from CGP, in cancer care,
predicting response to treatment, and improving access to and success of
targeted trials in oncology; and the ability of tissue and blood based
TMB to predict responses to certain types of cancer, including NSCLC.
All such forward-looking statements are based on management's current
expectations of future events and are subject to a number of risks and
uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially and
adversely from those set forth in or implied by such forward-looking
statements. These risks and uncertainties include the risk that the
results presented are found to lack scientific, medical or clinical
utility or that subsequent research renders the results presented less
useful or not useful in clinical practice; Foundation Medicine's assays
and molecular information platform will not be able to identify genomic
alterations in the same manner as prior clinical data; and the risks
described under the caption "Risk Factors" in Foundation Medicine's
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2017, which
is on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as well as other
risks detailed in Foundation Medicine's subsequent filings with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. All information in this press
release is as of the date of the release, and Foundation Medicine
undertakes no duty to update this information unless required by law.