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Although tumor mutational burden is established as a clinically informative feature of tumors, its optimal use in therapeutic decision-making faces many challenges, and we are only beginning to fully understand its strengths and limitations.
Although tumor mutational burden burden (TMB) is established as a clinically informative feature of tumors, its optimal use in therapeutic decision-making faces many challenges, and we are only beginning to fully understand its strengths and limitations. Development of biomarkers that can be readily applied in the clinic to identify patients most likely to respond to groundbreaking immunotherapies has become a priority in immuno-oncology.1
Next-generation sequencing (NGS), used to estimate the number of somatic mutations within a tumor specimen, is among the leading candidates for TMB detection. The pinnacle of its success arrived in mid-2020 with the tumor agnostic FDA approval of the immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) pembrolizumab (Keytruda) for patients with high TMB.2 New studies evaluating the pancancer role of TMB as a predictive biomarker of response to ICIs have revealed some of its limitations, raising doubts about its broad applicability and the appropriateness of a universal TMB cutoff.3-6
In non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), the predictive power of TMB is perhaps best characterized, these challenges present a hurdle to clinical implementation of TMB assays. A supplemental biologics license application for the dual checkpoint inhibition in patients with NSCLC who had high TMB was subsequently withdrawn by the drug developers when a phase 3 trial failed to demonstrate an overall survival (OS) benefit in this population.7,8 Ongoing research is focused on finding ways to unleash the true potential of TMB, including efforts to standardize its measurement, define better cutoffs, and understand its role in common cancer types that have been largely overlooked.7,8
Ongoing research is focused on finding ways to unleash the true potential of TMB, including efforts to standardize its measurement, define better cut-offs, and understand its role in common cancer types that have been largely overlooked to date.9,10
In 2017, pembrolizumab received an historic tumor agnostic approval for the treatment of tumors with high levels of microsatellite instability (MSI-H) or mismatch repair deficiency (dMMR) after these biomarkers were shown to identify patients with improved outcomes.11 The theory behind the efficacy of ICIs in this patient population was that tumors with greater numbers of mutations provoke a stronger antitumor immune response because they increase the presence of neoantigens, which activate cytotoxic T cells, on the tumor cell surface.9,12,13
Mismatch repair (MMR) is a mechanism through which cells repair types of DNA damage that typically occur within areas of short, repetitive DNA sequences known as microsatellites. Abnormalities in the MMR pathway lead to inability to repair damaged DNA and accumulation of mutations, as well as a characteristic variability in the lengths of microsatellites; thus, MSI-H is an indication of dMMR.14
Although dMMR/MSI-H is more common in some tumors than others, it is observed in a small proportion of patients overall.15 Although almost all tumors with MSI-H have high mutation rates, less than one-fifth of highly mutated tumors display MSI-H, suggesting that other mechanisms drive some tumors to acquire more mutations.16
Assessment of TMB using whole-exome sequencing (WES) allowed investigators to capture highly mutated tumors irrespective of cause; although TMB varies, a subset of patients with high TMB can be observed in almost every cancer type.16 Initial retrospective studies in NSCLC and melanoma demonstrated that higher levels of TMB were associated with improved outcomes following ICIs.17,18 Since then, TMB has emerged as a powerful predictor of response to ICIs across different cancer types.3,9
Targeted NGS panels, which are faster and less expensive than WES, provide a comparable estimate of TMB and are widely used.19-21 Most measure TMB from tissue biopsies, but liquid biopsies that use circulating tumor DNA isolated from the blood are being developed.9
A growing number of prospective trials have been initiated to validate the relationship between TMB and ICI outcomes. Most notable is the phase 2 KEYNOTE-158 trial (NCT02628067), in which pembrolizumab monotherapy was evaluated in patients with multiple types of advanced solid tumors that had progressed following prior treatment. Among 102 patients with high levels of TMB (≥ 10 mutations [mut]/Mb), the overall response rate (ORR) was 29.4% (95% CI, 20.8%-39.3%), with complete responses in 4 patients and 57% of responses lasting at least 12 months. Responses were observed across 8 tumor types. An ORR of 6.3% (95% CI, 4.6%8.3%) was observed in patients with TMB lower than 10 mut/Mb (n = 688).2
These results led the FDA to approve pembrolizumab in June 2020 for the treatment of adult and pediatric patients with unresectable or metastatic TMB-high (≥ 10 mut/Mb) solid tumors, securing another tumor agnostic win for the drug. The FoundationOne CDx assay, a 324-gene panel that estimates TMB based on a 0.8 Mb region of the exome, was approved as a companion diagnostic for use in this indication.2
Although FoundationOne CDx is the only FDA-approved TMB assay, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, New York, developed MSK-IMPACT, which leverages a 468-gene panel covering a 1.1-Mb region of the exomet and has been authorized by the FDA through the 510K pathway. Numerous other TMB assays are commercially available for use in a research setting (TABLE).22
The abundance of available assays has led to questions surrounding standardization of TMB estimation across different assays and tumor types. Friends of Cancer Research established a TMB Harmonization Consortium of stakeholders from pharmaceutical and diagnostic companies and scientific organizations, including the FDA, to conduct a comprehensive review of available data regarding TMB and response to immunotherapy.
They found that some assays consistently underestimated TMB and others overestimated, compared with WES-derived TMB, with the size and content of the gene panel identified as key factors in assay performance. They developed consensus recommendations for standardization of NGS panels for TMB estimation and built a calibration tool to enhance the comparability of assays.23,24
Doubts remain regarding the broad applicability of TMB as a predictive biomarker and over the use of a universal cutoff for determining high TMB. A criticism of KEYNOTE-158 is that it did not include more common tumor types, such as colorectal cancer, prostate, and breast cancer.10
The predictive role of TMB is being explored in these settings. Prostate cancer is notable considering that ICIs typically offer little benefit to most patients. Preliminary data presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology Genitourinary Cancers Symposium demonstrated that a cohort of patients with advanced prostate cancer who received ICI therapy guided by blood-based TMB score experienced clinical benefit.25 In a separate real-world biomarker study, investigators showed that patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer who had high TMB (≥ 10 mut/Mb) derived greater benefit from ICIs vs taxane chemotherapy.26
Another issue with KEYNOTE-158 is that among the tumor types enrolled, TMB appeared to be a better predictor of response in only some tumors. For example, the ORR in patients with endometrial cancer was 47%, compared with 7% in patients with anal cancer.2
Additionally, the study measured ORR and not more clinically meaningful end points. Several subsequent studies have now evaluated the relationship between patient survival and TMB. Samstein et al analyzed the clinical and genomic data of 1662 patients with advanced cancer treated with ICIs whose tumors were evaluated for TMB using the MSK-IMPACT assay. High TMB (defined as the highest 20% in each tumor type) was associated with improved OS across most cancer types, although in some cases not statistically significantly.3
A notable exception was glioma, in which high TMB was associated with poorer survival,3 possibly because the high TMB observed in glioma may result from treatment with DNA-damaging cytotoxic drugs and may not necessarily be associated with increased infiltration of T cells into the tumor microenvironment. Another study demonstrated an association between TMB and improved OS following ICI therapy, but only among tumors in which the levels of CD8-positive T cells correlated with predicted neoantigen load, such as melanoma, lung cancer, and bladder cancer.5
In a third study examining the relationship between TMB and post-ICI OS, which used the approved cutoff of 10 mut/Mb, the median OS was longer only in patients with certain types of MMR-proficient cancer, such as head and neck cancer, NSCLC, and melanoma, with no benefit in patients with other cancer types.4 These results have led some to argue that the clinical benefit of high TMB as a biomarker has not been convincingly demonstrated across all tumor histologies.10
Another challenge to the clinical application of TMB assays is how to define an appropriate cutoff for high TMB. In their study, Samstein et al found that the top 20% of TMB varied markedly between cancer types.3 In another study, investigators sought to determine how the FDA-approved cut-off performed in a realworld setting. They analyzed the outcomes of more than 1600 patients treated with ICIs.
Overall patients with a TMB of at least 10 mut/Mb had better outcomes than those with a TMB below 10 mut/Mb; the universal cutoff did not reliably predict increased survival after immunotherapy across all tumor types. Notably, in patients with renal cell carcinoma, no cases met the high TMB threshold but many patients still responded.6 Many argue that a cancer type-specific threshold may be better, whereas others have suggested that an arbitrary threshold of high TMB is wholly inappropriate and that the use of ICIs should instead be considered in the context of the cause of the TMB.4,6
The greatest preponderance of data showing an association between TMB and ICI response comes from NSCLC, but even in this setting its predictive role remains uncertain. Subgroup analyses from randomized clinical trials of ICIs in NSCLC in various settings demonstrated significantly improved response rates and progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with high TMB compared with those with low TMB when ICIs were used as monotherapy.27,28
However, its predictive role in patients receiving ICIs in combination with chemotherapy appears more limited; in the KEYNOTE-189 (NCT02578680) study, high TMB was not significantly associated with improved OS, PFS or ORR in patients treated with pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy as first-line therapy for metastatic nonsquamous NSCLC.29
Foundation Medicine’s blood-based TMB assay was being used in the phase 2/3 B-F1RST (NCT02848651) and phase 3 B-FAST (NCT03178552) trials, which evaluated the potential of TMB as a predictive biomarker for atezolizumab (Tecentriq) in the frontline treatment of advanced/metastatic NSCLC. High TMB (defined as 14.5 mut/Mb) was measured as 16 or greater in the blood TMB (bTMB) scale.
InB-F1RST, the primary biomarker end point was investigator-assessed PFS at the cutoff of bTMB of at least 16. The median PFS was 5 months (95% CI, 1.6-10.8) in patients with high TMB compared with 3.5 months (95% CI, 2.6-4.3) for those with low TMB (HR, 0.80; 90% CI, 0.541.18; P = .35). The median OS was 23.9 months (95% CI, 8.8-not estimable) vs 13.4 months (HR, 0.66; 90% CI, 0.40-1.10; P = .18), respectively. Further, the ORR in the bTMB-high group was 35.7% (95% CI, 19.2%-55.5%) vs 5.5% in the bTMB-low group (95% CI, 2.2%-12.2%) (P < .0001).30 In B-FAST, in which atezolizumab monotherapy was compared with platinum-based chemotherapy in biomarker-selected patients with advanced NSCLC, results from cohort C, in which patients were selected based upon high bTMB levels, failed to meet the primary end point of PFS.31
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