Abstract A007: Representative sampling of invasive breast carcinomas: Interim report from a prospective study (HOLST-F)
Background: Although a range of therapeutic options are available in the management of invasive breast carcinomas, spatial segregation of tumour subclones has hampered biomarker identification in single-region samples. Representative sampling (RS) overcomes spatial bias by sampling from a homogenized and well-mixed cancer specimen. The Homogenization of Leftover Surgical Tissue Feasibility Study (HoLST-F - NCT03832062) is a prospective trial aiming to assess the feasibility of RS in tumor tissue leftover after pathology sampling. An interim analysis of the breast cancer cohort is presented. Methods: In the context of the HoLST-F study and pre-specified end-points, representative samples derived from 75 leftover invasive breast carcinoma specimens underwent flow cytometric analysis of CK8/18, CD3, Ki67 and DAPI. Tumor cell enrichment by CK8/18 positivity and ploidy (in aneuploid carcinomas) was performed for downstream DNA extraction and whole exome sequencing. Somatic variants were determined using a bespoke pipeline to remove artefacts associated with fixation. Variant oncogenicity and therapeutic evidence levels were assigned by OncoKB variant annotation. Quantitative image analysis was applied to tissue sections from diagnostic FFPE blocks stained with Ki67 immunohistochemistry (n=78) and H&E for lymphocytic infiltration scores (n=175) to correlate with flow cytometry. Results: In enriched representative samples, oncogenic mutations were commonly identified at high variant allele frequency (VAF) in known breast carcinoma driver genes including PIK3CA, CDH1, TP53, KMT2C and GATA3. Other clinically relevant oncogenic mutations were identified in ESR1, PTEN, ERBB2, RB1, AKT1, BRCA1, NF1 and FOXA1 which have been associated with resistance to various anti-cancer therapies. These mutations occurred at low and high VAFs indicative of both of clonal and sub-clonal resistance mechanisms. Recurrent variants in ESR1 (e.g. D538G) and PIK3CA (e.g. H1047R/L) were associated with Level 1 evidence for use as predictive biomarkers, while variants in twelve other genes across the cohort were associated with Level 2-4 evidence. Lymphocyte infiltration scores and Ki67 expression varied by tumor region, however RS by flow cytometry showed strong correlation with a weighted average across multiregional quantification of Ki67 expression (R=0.81, p=2.8 × 10-8) and lymphocyte infiltration (R=0.61, p<2.2 × 10-16). Conclusions: RS of invasive breast carcinoma in the HoLST-F trial has recapitulated the expected genomic driver landscape in breast cancer, in addition to identifying both clonal and subclonal genomic mechanisms of therapy resistance. Many of these mutations are either current or emerging therapeutic targets. Flow quantification of cells expressing phenotypic biomarkers (Ki67 and CD3) is feasible through RS and early analysis indicates that RS correlates with a weighted average across multiple regions. Leftover surgical tissue is an underutilized resource for biomarker assessment in breast carcinomas and can be examined by RS. Citation Format: Brian Hanley, Lisa Gallegos, Lavinia Spain, Husayn Pallikonda, Zayd Tippu, Samantha Hill, Aoune Barhoumi, Fiona Byrne, Yulia Dogva, Ashley Gilchrist, Glenn Noel-Storr, Hannah Veloz, Stacey Stanislaw, Harold Sansano, Kim Edmonds, Eleanor Carlyle, Nicholas Turner, James Larkin, Nelson Alexander, Samra Turajlic. Representative sampling of invasive breast carcinomas: Interim report from a prospective study (HOLST-F) [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference in Cancer Research: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 19-22; San Diego, California. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(3 Suppl_1):Abstract nr A007.