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Clinicians must recognize that liquid and solid biopsies show significant discordance. ESR1 mutations are more frequently detected in liquid assays, while PIK3CA mutations are more often found in solid tissue. This variability by gene directly impacts the optimal testing strategy for patients.
There's a growing recognition that the molecular profile of a primary tumor can differ significantly from its metastases. To guide treatment more accurately, the preferred practice is to biopsy an accessible metastatic lesion when possible, as this better reflects the biology of the active disease being treated.
While liquid biopsies are a valuable, less invasive tool, a negative result is inconclusive for ruling out actionable mutations in NSCLC. It may simply mean the tumor isn't shedding enough DNA. Therefore, a negative liquid biopsy should never be the final word; it must be followed by a tissue biopsy to ensure patients don't miss out on targeted therapies.
ctDNA testing (liquid biopsy) is more effective than tissue biopsy for identifying ESR1 mutations. It samples DNA from all metastatic sites, capturing the disease's genetic heterogeneity and reflecting the most active resistance mechanisms, unlike a single-site needle biopsy which can miss them.
A key distinction for oncologists is that PIK3CA mutations are typically "truncal" (present from baseline), whereas ESR1 mutations are "acquired" after exposure to aromatase inhibitors. This biological difference dictates when and how to test for each biomarker throughout a patient's treatment journey.
Next-generation mutant-specific PI3K inhibitors could lead to complex biomarker requirements. A future drug label might require a PIK3CA mutation for eligibility but simultaneously exclude patients who also have downstream PTEN or AKT alterations, which can confer resistance.
ESR1 mutations in breast cancer are acquired alterations, meaning they can be missed by a single test. The speaker advocates for serial testing, especially after disease progression, using blood-based ctDNA analysis. This dynamic monitoring approach is essential for identifying patients who become eligible for targeted therapies over time.
Dr. Bardia emphasizes that ESR1 is an 'acquired alteration,' meaning the mutation can develop during treatment. This necessitates a shift from one-time diagnostic testing to a dynamic, serial testing model. Repeat testing is critical to identify these actionable mutations as they arise, allowing patients to access newly approved targeted therapies.
Not all mutations are equal. PIK3CA alterations are often present from the start (truncal mutations), indicating a more aggressive cancer. In contrast, ESR1 mutations are typically acquired later as a direct mechanism of resistance to endocrine therapy, making repeat testing after disease progression crucial.
Post-approval studies of the oral SERD elacestrant confirm its clinical benefit in ESR1-mutant breast cancer. However, this real-world evidence also reveals a new insight: patients who have both an ESR1 and a PIK3CA mutation tend to have a shorter time on treatment, suggesting that the PIK3CA mutation may drive resistance to this therapy.
Even with contemporaneously collected samples, biomarker concordance between solid tissue and liquid biopsies is not uniform. Data shows ESR1 mutations are consistently more likely to be discordant—often found only in liquid—than PIK3CA or AKT mutations, reinforcing the need for gene-specific testing strategies.