A prospective trial to evaluate the performance of the multitarget hepatocellular carcinoma blood test (mt-HBT) for screening at-risk patients: The Altus study.

Authors

null

Binu John

University of Miami, Miami, FL

Binu John , Kyle Porter , Bassam Dahman , Neehar Parikh , Alvin C. Silva , Ju Dong Yang , Patrick Joseph , Laura E. Strong , Paul J. Limburg

Organizations

University of Miami, Miami, FL, Exact Sciences Corporation, Madison, WI, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, University of Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Scottsdale, AZ, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, West Hollywood, CA, Independent science (formerly Exact Sciences Corporation), Madison, WI, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN

Research Funding

Pharmaceutical/Biotech Company

Background: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a major cause of cancer-related death in the U.S. HCC surveillance is associated with improved early detection and receipt of curative treatment. However, current surveillance strategies suffer from low adherence and suboptimal sensitivity. The multi-target HCC blood test (mt-HBT) is a novel early detection assay that provides a qualitative result based on a multiparametric algorithm that incorporates information from methylation markers (HOXA1, TSPYL5, and B3GALT6), AFP, and patient sex. Here, we describe the protocol for a prospective, multicenter clinical trial designed to investigate the performance of the mt-HBT in patients at risk for HCC. Methods: ALTernative to U/S (ALTUS) is a longitudinal, multicenter, prospective study with a targeted enrollment of 3,000 participants. The main inclusion and exclusion criteria are described in the table. Participants will receive HCC surveillance imaging (either U/S or CT/MRI) and blood collection for the mt-HBT. Those with positive U/S are anticipated to receive standard-of-care imaging follow-up with a multiphase CT or MRI, and those with a negative U/S will receive a study CT/MRI within 30 days of blood collection. Imaging interpretation is based on the CT/MRI LI-RADS (LR) v2018 categories. The primary endpoints are the overall sensitivity and specificity of the mt-HBT to detect HCC, defined as pathology-confirmed HCC or hepatocellular cholangiocarcinoma (cHCC-CCA), LR-4/5, or LR-TIV/M plus definite/probable HCC or cHCC-CCA. The secondary endpoints are mt-HBT early-stage sensitivity, and performance in a) participants with LR-5 or biopsy-confirmed HCC and b) participants confirmed non-HCC. Participants not diagnosed with a liver malignancy at visit one will continue to receive HCC surveillance, returning for a second visit ̃6 months from first blood collection. Blood will be collected after the second visit for the mt-HBT. Data on treatment will be collected for those diagnosed with HCC. Study participants and providers will be blinded to the mt-HBT results. Participants are currently enrolling across the U.S., with 60 targeted sites and an anticipated 12-month enrollment window. Clinical trial information: NCT05064553.

Notable inclusion and exclusion criteria for the ALTUS study.

Inclusion
Exclusion
≥18 years of age
Cancer diagnosis within the past 5 years
Subjects with cirrhosis or non-cirrhotic subjects with chronic HBV infection
Child-Pugh class C, except for transplant candidates

Solid liver nodule >1 cm by U/S or elevated AFP (>100 ng/mL) in 12 months without confirmation of no HCC.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2022 ASCO Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium

Session Type

Trials in Progress Poster Session

Session Title

Trials in Progress Poster Session B: Cancers of the Pancreas, Small Bowel, and Hepatobiliary Tract

Track

Pancreatic Cancer,Hepatobiliary Cancer,Neuroendocrine/Carcinoid,Small Bowel Cancer

Sub Track

Prevention, Screening, and Hereditary Cancers

Clinical Trial Registration Number

NCT05064553

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2022.40.4_suppl.TPS486

Abstract #

TPS486

Poster Bd #

N5

Abstract Disclosures