Surgical and Blood-Based Minimal Residual Disease in Patients with Ovarian Cancer after First-line Therapy: Clinical Outcomes and Translational Opportunities

Anne Knisely & Amir A. Jazaeri et al.

Abstract

Purpose:

Minimal residual disease (MRD) after first-line treatment of advanced-stage ovarian cancer remains a long-standing barrier to cure. We investigated the prognostic and translational value of MRD detection by second-look laparoscopy (SLL) and ctDNA at the completion of first-line therapy.

Experimental Design:

Patients with high-grade epithelial ovarian cancer who had a complete clinical response to first-line therapy and underwent SLL and plasma collection for ctDNA were included. Progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were estimated based on MRD and clinicopathologic status. Spatial transcriptomics (GeoMx and Visium) and proteomics (CODEX) profiling were performed on serial samples from select patients.

Results:

Forty of 95 (42.1%) patients had surgically detected MRD, which was associated with worse PFS (median PFS 7.4 vs. 23.8 months; P < 0.001) and OS (median OS 33.9 vs. not reached; P < 0.001). SLL positivity was an independent negative prognostic factor for OS (HR, 4.40; 95% confidence interval, 1.37–14.21; P = 0.013) in multivariable analysis. Among 44 patients who underwent SLL and had ctDNA testing, 34% (15/44) were ctDNA-positive, which was associated with worse PFS (6.4 vs. 28.1 months; P < 0.001) and OS (32.4 months vs. not reached; P = 0.008). We demonstrated the feasibility of spatial multiomics in studying MRD and their ability to provide hypothesis-generating observations, implicating the upregulation of the hypoxia signaling pathway, expression of multiple druggable targets (CDK6, GLS, MSLN, ERBB2), and immune exclusion in MRD lesions.

Conclusions:

Approximately half of patients in clinical remission after first-line therapy have assessable MRD, which can inform prognosis, therapeutic target discovery, and clinical trials.

Funding
Training of Academic Gynecologic OncologistsCancer Center Support GrantCancer Center Support GrantDevelopmental Research ProgramPathologyThe University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center FundingMD Anderson Ovarian Cancer Moon Shot FundingBreak Through Cancer (BTC) FundingDevelopmental Research ProgramStand Up To Cancer (SU2C) Grant 62606301-206042Training of Academic Gynecologic OncologistsBreak Through Cancer FundingPathology

NCI NIH HHS

T32 CA101642

NCI NIH HHS

P30 CA016672

National Cancer Institute (NCI)

P30CA016672

National Cancer Institute (NCI)

CA281701

NCI NIH HHS

P30 CA008748

NCI NIH HHS

P50 CA281701

National Cancer Institute (NCI)

T32CA101642

National Cancer Institute

P30CA016672

National Cancer Institute

T32CA101642

National Cancer Institute

CA281701