AI Article Synopsis

  • The Zero Childhood Cancer Program uses precision medicine to help kids with tough cancers by analyzing their tumor and genetic data.
  • In a study involving 252 high-risk pediatric cancer patients, researchers found nearly 1,000 molecular abnormalities, revealing that a significant majority had potential treatment targets.
  • The program's comprehensive molecular profiling has helped clarify the genetic causes of these cancers, providing therapeutic opportunities for some patients, with 31% showing clinical improvements after recommended therapies.

Article Abstract

The Zero Childhood Cancer Program is a precision medicine program to benefit children with poor-outcome, rare, relapsed or refractory cancer. Using tumor and germline whole genome sequencing (WGS) and RNA sequencing (RNAseq) across 252 tumors from high-risk pediatric patients with cancer, we identified 968 reportable molecular aberrations (39.9% in WGS and RNAseq, 35.1% in WGS only and 25.0% in RNAseq only). Of these patients, 93.7% had at least one germline or somatic aberration, 71.4% had therapeutic targets and 5.2% had a change in diagnosis. WGS identified pathogenic cancer-predisposing variants in 16.2% of patients. In 76 central nervous system tumors, methylome analysis confirmed diagnosis in 71.1% of patients and contributed to a change of diagnosis in two patients (2.6%). To date, 43 patients have received a recommended therapy, 38 of whom could be evaluated, with 31% showing objective evidence of clinical benefit. Comprehensive molecular profiling resolved the molecular basis of virtually all high-risk cancers, leading to clinical benefit in some patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41591-020-1072-4DOI Listing

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