9. EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Incidence of colorectal cancer in India is 3.6 – 4.1 per
100,000
- Left sided tumors are more common
-Around 2/3
- ~ 25% of patients are < 40 years of age
- More proximal tumors
10. EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Incidence of CRC in India expected to rise by 80% by
2035
- 114,000 new cases with mortality ~ 87,000
- 25% of patients present with metastases
- 35% develop metastases after primary therapy
- k-ras mutation is around 40 %
-Similar to world-wide data
11. PREDICTION IS MORE WORRISOME
Annual percentage change-based predicted incidence rates of rectosigmoid and
rectal cancers by age compared with incidence rate in 2010
Bailey CE, et al. JAMA Surgery. 2015;150:17-22.
12. CRC > 55
INCIDENCE AND MORTALITY TRENDS
~1990s
2011
CRC 50 - 55
EAO CRC
Per
100,000
years
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21. CRC : HCG BANGALORE
Veldore VH, Rao MR, Prabhudesai SA, Tejaswi R, Kakara S, Pattanayak S, et al. Prevalence of KRAS mutations in metastatic
colorectal cancer: A retrospective observational study from India. Indian J Cancer 2014;51:531-7.
Prevalence of KRAS mutation
(42.8%) in India is at par with world
literature that varies from 30% to
60%.
24. MADURAI 625009
TAMIL NADU INDIA
0452-2510000 8248883595
CLIENT CODE : C000051601
CLIENT'S NAME AND ADDRESS :
VELAMMAL MEDICAL COLLEGE HOSPITAL & RESEARCH INSTITUTE
VELLAMMAL VILLAGE, MADURAI-TUTICORIAN RING ROAF, ANUPPANADI,
DIAGNOSTIC REPORT
SRL LIMITED
PRIME SQUARE BUILDING,PLOT NO 1,GAIWADI INDUSTRIAL
ESTATE,S.V. ROAD,GOREGAON (W)
MUMBAI, 400062
MAHARASHTRA, INDIA
Tel : 1-800-222-000, Fax : 022 - 67801212
CIN - U74899PB1995PLC045956
Email : connect@srl.in
PATIENT ID :PATIENT NAME : AJITH KUMAR
ACCESSION NO : 0002RJ073694 AGE : 21 Years SEX : Male DATE OF BIRTH :
DRAWN : 27/10/2018 16:00 RECEIVED : 29/10/2018 07:12 REPORTED : 03/11/2018 15:39
REFERRING DOCTOR : CLIENT PATIENT ID : 1805030173
Final ResultsTest Report Status Units
KRAS MUTATION DETECTION
KRAS MUTATION AT CODON 12 (EXON 2)
NOT DETECTED
DETECTED
KRAS MUTATION AT CODON 13 (EXON 2)
NOT DETECTED
DETECTED
BLOCK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER S-3175/18-A10
Interpretation(s)
KRAS MUTATION DETECTION-
Background: Somatic mutations of KRAS gene represent the most common alterations currently known in colon rectal cancer (CRC). In addition, subsets of NSCLC patients
also harbour KRAS mutation especially who have EGFR widltype genotype. KRAS mutation is found to be reported in 30-45 % of CRC patients, has shown to be a predictive
biomarker of resistance to anti-EGFR antibody therapy [Loupakis F et al 2009 Soeda H et al 2013].
Clinical utility: KRAS codons 12 and 13 mutations predict resistance to anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies in metastatic colorectal cancer.
Test method: Pyrosequencing.
Result interpretation:
A)Positive: The result indicates that the patient’s tumor sample shows either KRAS codon 12 or codon 13 mutation. Presence of KRAS mutation in codon 12 or 13 is useful in
identifying patients who are likely to show resistance to anti-EGFR therapy in metastatic colorectal cancer. Based on American Society of Clinical Oncology Provisional Clinical
Opinion, treatment with anti-EGFR monoclonal antibody therapy is not recommended for patients harboring codon 12 or 13 mutation in the KRASgene.
B) Negative: The result indicates that the patient’s tumor sample do not show KRAS codon 12 and 13 mutation.
Limitations:
PCR is highly sensitive technique however inherent PCR inhibitors in the specimen may result into amplification failure.
Pyrosequencing has a sensitivity of 10% mutant allele. Tissues with less than 20% of tumor cells may not be detect mutation in KRAS codon 12 and 13.
The test will detect most common mutations in codon 12 and 13 of the KRAS gene. Mutations in other locations within the KRAS gene will not be detected.
References:
Loupakis F1, Ruzzo A, Cremolini C et al (2009). KRAS codon 61, 146 and BRAF mutations predict resistance to cetuximab plus irinotecan in KRAS codon 12 and 13 wild-type
metastatic colorectal cancer. Br J Cancer. Aug 18 101(4):715-21.
Soeda H, Shimodaira H, Watanabe M, et al (2013). Clinical usefulness of KRAS, BRAF, and PIK3CA mutations as predictive markers of cetuximab efficacy in irinotecan- and
oxaliplatin-refractory Japanese patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. Int J Clin Oncol. Aug 18(4):670-7.
**End Of Report**
Please visit www.srlworld.com for related Test Information for this accession
Dr. Firoz Ahmad,PhD
Research Scientist and Senior
Manager - R&D
Dr. B. R. Das, PhD
Advisor and Mentor
R&D & Molecular Diagnostics
Dr. (COL) Prabal Deb
Director (Lab Operations) &
Chief Histopathologist
Page 1 Of 2
30. CYTOREDUCTIVE SURGERY & HEATED
INTRAPERITONEAL CHEMOTHERAPY (HIPEC)
• Indication: (limited) peritoneal metastases
• RCT: CRS+HIPEC (5FU infusion, IP MMC) (n=105)
Verwall et al, J Clin Oncol 21:3737-3743, 2003
31. 3507: CREST: RANDOMISED PHASE III STUDY OF STENTING AS A BRIDGE TO
SURGERY IN OBSTRUCTING COLORECTAL CANCER—RESULTS OF THE UK
COLORECTAL ENDOSCOPIC STENTING TRIAL (CREST) – HILL J, ET AL
Study objective
• To investigate the effects of endoluminal stenting vs emergency surgery on outcomes and QoL in patients with potentially
CRC
*Endoscopic/fluoroscopic technique with elective surgery
performed 1–4 weeks later. Hill et al. J Clin Oncol 2016; 34 (suppl): abstr 3507
R
1:1
PD
Stratification
• Curative intent based on pre-operative
staging investigations
Endoluminal stenting*
(n=123)Key patient inclusion criteria
• Left-sided CRC
• Radiological evidence of
obstruction
• No evidence of peritonitis
or perforation
(n=245)
PRIMARY ENDPOINTS
• Length of hospital stay
• 30-day mortality
SECONDARY ENDPOINTS
• Stenting completion, complication rate
• Presence/duration of stoma/anastomosis rate
• 6-month OS; 3-year DFS
• QoL, perioperative morbidity
PD
Surgical decompression
(n=122)
32. 3507: CREST: RANDOMISED PHASE III STUDY OF STENTING AS A BRIDGE TO
SURGERY IN OBSTRUCTING COLORECTAL CANCER—RESULTS OF THE UK
COLORECTAL ENDOSCOPIC STENTING TRIAL (CREST) – HILL J, ET AL
Key results
Hill et al. J Clin Oncol 2016; 34 (suppl): abstr 3507
Remaininginhospital(%)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
0
Days in hospital
20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180
Surgery
Stenting
No.
patients
133
133
Obs.
92
86
No Events
Exp.
92.1
85.9
2P=1.0
3%
4%
Stenting Surgery
Hospital days (curative patients with complete
1 year data)
N
Median (IQR)
86
14.5 (9–24)
92
13.5 (9.5–22.5)
Deaths within 30 days of randomisation
N 5 6
Days from randomisation to death
Median (IQR) 7 (6–15) 5 (3–9)
Length of hospital stay
33. 3507: CREST: RANDOMISED PHASE III STUDY OF STENTING AS A BRIDGE TO
SURGERY IN OBSTRUCTING COLORECTAL CANCER—RESULTS OF THE UK
COLORECTAL ENDOSCOPIC STENTING TRIAL (CREST) – HILL J, ET AL
Key results (continued)
• QoL and critical care utilisations at 3 and 12 months were not significantly different
Conclusions
• In patients with potentially curable CRC, stenting as a bridge to surgery had an
80% clinical success rate and significantly reduced stoma formation
• Mortality, length of hospital stay and QoL were similar between stenting and emergency surgery
• Stenting appears to be a reasonable alternative to emergency surgery
*Assessed by Clavien-Dindo classification. Hill et al. J Clin Oncol 2016; 34 (suppl): abstr 3507
Stenting Emergency surgery
Stoma formation, % 46 69
p-value 0.001
All deaths, n/N 59/123 47/122
Deaths, cancer patients 58/120 47/109
Surgical complications* 48 45
34. 1. Patients with resectable metastatic disease at presentation
2. Patients with unresectable disease at presentation that becomes
potentially resectable after downstaging (conversion) with systemic
therapy
3. Patients who have potentially resectable metastatic disease but
who are not candidates for resective surgery
4. Patients with unresectable metastatic disease
PATIENTS WITH METASTATIC DISEASE CAN BE
CLASSIFIED INTO 4 GROUPS:
35. CASE DISCUSSION
WHAT IS YOUR PREFERRED CHOICE OF TREATMENT?
1. CHEMOTHERAPY
2. CHEMO + Mab
3. IMMUNOTHERAPY
36. THE LUXURY OF SO MANY OPTIONS: HOW DO WE
PERSONALIZE THERAPY?
Patient X
Patient Y
Patient Z
42. Resection
Maximising OS, while maintaining QoL
Treatment
strategy
Treatment
goal
Curative
surgery
10%
Classification
Upfront
resectable
MOST PATIENTS WITH mCRC HAVE INITIALLY
UNRESECTABLE DISEASE AT FIRST PRESENTATION:
INCREASING OS IS THE PRIMARY TREATMENT GOAL
20–30% 60–70%
Potentially
resectable
Permanently
unresectable
CT +
biologic
CT +
biologic
Relapse
Initially unresectable
43. COLON CANCER: MORE THAN 1 DISEASE
MSI vs MSS RAS WT vs
mutant
Right vs left vs
rectal
Young vs old
Stool flora typesBRAF WT vs
mutant
HER2
Molecular Anatomic
44. CRC : HCG BANGALORE
Veldore VH, Rao MR, Prabhudesai SA, Tejaswi R, Kakara S, Pattanayak S, et al. Prevalence of KRAS mutations in metastatic
colorectal cancer: A retrospective observational study from India. Indian J Cancer 2014;51:531-7.
Prevalence of KRAS mutation
(42.8%) in India is at par with world
literature that varies from 30% to
60%.
47. SEVERAL FACTORS INFLUENCE 1ST LINE
TREATMENT DECISIONS IN MCRC
1. et al. Lancet 2016;17:1426–1434; 4. Arnold D, et al. Ann Oncol 2017; doi: 10.1093.
Biomarker status1–3
Patient characteristics1
Primary tumor location4
48. SEVERAL FACTORS INFLUENCE 1ST LINE
TREATMENT DECISIONS IN MCRC
1. Van Cutsem E, et al. Ann Oncol 2016;27:1386–1422; 2. Lenz H-J, et al. Ann Oncol 2014;25 (suppl 4; Abstract No. 501O); 3. Stintzing S, et al.
Lancet 2016;17:1426–1434; 4. Arnold D, et al. Ann Oncol 2017; doi: 10.1093; 5. Heinemann V, et al. Lancet Oncol 2014;15:1065–1075; 6.
Venook A, et al. JAMA 2017;317:2392–2401.
*FIRE-3 did not meet its primary endpoint of significantly improving overall response rate (ORR) based on investigators’ read in
patients with KRAS (exon 2) wt mCRC;5 †CALGB/SWOG 80405 study did not meet its primary endpoint of significantly
improving overall survival in the cetuximab + CT arm vs bevacizumab + CT arm in patients with KRAS (exon 2) wt mCRC.6
CT, chemotherapy
• Including BRAF, MSI and RAS status1
• RAS status predicts outcomes with
anti-EGFR therapies1
• In RAS wt mCRC, cetuximab + CT is
associated with greater
improvements in ORR, OS and PFS
over bevacizumab + CT2,3*† [CALGB
SWOG/80405, FIRE-3]
Biomarker status1–3
Patient characteristics1
Primary tumor location4
49. CALGB/SWOG 80405: FIRST-LINE CT +
BEVACIZUMAB OR CETUXIMAB IN
KRAS-WT mCRC
• Multicenter, randomized, open-label phase III trial
• Primary endpoint: OS; secondary endpoints: PFS, TTF, DoR
• Conclusion: no difference in first line
Pts ≥ 18 yrs of age with KRAS-WT
(codons 12, 13), locally advanced
or mCRC; ECOG PS 0/1; no prior
systemic treatment
(N = 1137)
FOLFOX or FOLFIRI
+ Bevacizumab IV Q2W
(n = 559)
FOLFOX or FOLFIRI
+ Cetuximab IV Q1W
(n = 578)
29.0
29.9
10.8
10.4
mOS,
Mos
mPFS,
Mos
Stratified by CT (FOLFOX vs FOLFIRI), prior adjuvant
chemotherapy (yes vs no), prior pelvic radiotherapy (yes vs no)
50. 100
80
60
40
20
0
0 12 24 36 48 60 72 84 96 108
Mos From Study Entry
EventFree(%)
CALGB/SWOG 80405 (FOLFIRI/FOLFOX + BEV OR
CETUXIMAB): OS BY TUMOR LOCATION (RAS WT)
Bevacizumab
(n = 152 vs 78)
32.6
(28.3-36.2)
29.2
(22.4-36.9)
0.88
(0.62-1.25)
.50
OS, Mos (95% CI) HR
(95% CI)
P Value
Left Right
Cetuximab
(n = 173 vs 71)
39.3
(32.9-42.9)
13.7
(11.3-19.0)
0.55
(0.39-0.79)
.001
.
51. 2014.
CETUXIMAB IS THE 1ST LINE THERAPY THAT DEMONSTRATES
SIGNIFICANT SURVIVAL BENEFIT OVER BEVACIZUMAB IN
LEFT-SIDED RAS WT MCRC IN THE PHASE III
CALGB/SWOG 80405 TRIAL
40
30
20
0
MedianOS(months)
Phase III CALGB/SWOG 804051–3
10
39.3
32.6
+6.7
months
HR=0.77
(p=0.04)
Bevacizumab
+ FOLFOX/FOLFIRI
(n=152)
Cetuximab
+ FOLFOX/FOLFIRI
(n=173)
52. CETUXIMAB IS THE 1ST LINE THERAPY THAT DEMONSTRATES
SIGNIFICANT SURVIVAL BENEFIT OVER BEVACIZUMAB IN
LEFT-SIDED RAS WT MCRC IN THE PHASE III FIRE-3 TRIAL
38.3
Bevacizumab
+ FOLFIRI
(n=149)
Cetuximab
+ FOLFIRI
(n=157)
40
30
20
0
MedianOS(months)
Phase III FIRE-3
)
28.0
10
+10.3
months
HR=0.63
(p=0.002)
53. SEVERAL FACTORS INFLUENCE 1ST LINE
TREATMENT DECISIONS IN MCRC
1. Van Cutsem E, et al. Ann Oncol 2016;27:1386–1422; 2. Lenz H-J, et al. Ann Oncol 2014;25 (suppl 4; Abstract No. 501O);
3. Stintzing S, et al. Lancet 2016;17:1426–1434; 4. Arnold D, et al. Ann Oncol 2017.
Biomarker status1–3
Primary tumor location4
• Age
• Performance status
• Organ function
• Comorbidities
• Patient attitude, expectations and
preferencePatient characteristics1
54. MCRC TREATMENT DECISION
RECOMMENDATIONS: FIRST LINE
2L1L 3L 4L
RAS
mutation
RAS
wild type
RAS
wild type
RAS
wild type
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-EGFR
Chemo +
anti-EGFR
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-EGFR
Other
anticancer
therapy, BSC,
or clinical trial
Other
anticancer
therapy, BSC,
or clinical trial
Other
anticancer
therapy, BSC,
or clinical trial
Other
anticancer
therapy, BSC,
or clinical trial
REGORAFENI
B
or TAS-102
REGORAFENI
B
or TAS-102
REGORAFENI
B
or TAS-102
Left-sided
cancers
only
Anti-VEGF Anti-EGFR
Bevacizumab Cetuximab
PanitumumabRegorafenib
or TAS-102
Regorafenib
or TAS-102
Regorafenib
or TAS-102
Regorafenib
or TAS-102
55. MCRC TREATMENT DECISION
RECOMMENDATIONS: SECOND LINE
2L1L 3L 4L
RAS
mutation
RAS
wild type
RAS
wild type
RAS
wild type
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-EGFR
Chemo +
anti-EGFR
Chemo +
anti-VEGF
Chemo +
anti-EGFR
Other
anticancer
therapy, BSC,
or clinical trial
Other
anticancer
therapy, BSC,
or clinical
trial
Other
anticancer
therapy, BSC,
or clinical
trial
Other
anticancer
therapy,
BSC, or
clinical trial
REGORAFENI
B
or TAS-102
REGORAFENI
B
or TAS-102
REGORAFENI
B
or TAS-102
Left-sided
cancers
only
Anti-
VEGF
Anti-
EGFR
Bevacizumab
Ramucirumab
Ziv-aflibercept
Cetuximab
Panitumumab
van Cutsem E, et al. Ann Oncol. 2016;27:1386-1422.
Regorafenib
or TAS-102
Regorafenib
or TAS-102
Regorafenib
or TAS-102
Regorafenib
or TAS-102
57. BIOFILM: A NEW CONCEPT OF TUMORIGENESIS
Biofilm may cause an increased
epithelial proliferation by
upregulation of the proinflammatory
IL-6 and
its downstream effector STAT3
Invasive polymicrobial bacterial
biofilms (bacterial aggregates
encased in a likely complex
matrix) predominantly (89%)
on right-sided tumors
Biofims associated with chronic
inflammation (e.g. CID)
Colon mucosal biofilm detection
may predict increased risk for
development of sporadic CRC
E-cadherin P-STAT3IL-6