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Dive into the research topics where Francisco Sanchez-Vega is active.

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Featured researches published by Francisco Sanchez-Vega.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2018

Molecular Determinants of Response to Anti-Programmed Cell Death (PD)-1 and Anti-Programmed Death-Ligand 1 (PD-L1) Blockade in Patients With Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer Profiled With Targeted Next-Generation Sequencing.

Hira Rizvi; Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Konnor La; Walid K. Chatila; Philip Jonsson; Darragh Halpenny; Andrew J. Plodkowski; Niamh Long; Jennifer Sauter; Natasha Rekhtman; Travis J. Hollmann; Kurt A. Schalper; Justin F. Gainor; Ronglai Shen; Ai Ni; Kathryn Cecilia Arbour; Taha Merghoub; Jedd D. Wolchok; Alexandra Snyder; Jamie E. Chaft; Mark G. Kris; Charles M. Rudin; Nicholas D. Socci; Michael F. Berger; Barry S. Taylor; Ahmet Zehir; David B. Solit; Maria E. Arcila; Marc Ladanyi; Gregory J. Riely

Purpose Treatment of advanced non-small-cell lung cancer with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) is characterized by durable responses and improved survival in a subset of patients. Clinically available tools to optimize use of ICIs and understand the molecular determinants of response are needed. Targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) is increasingly routine, but its role in identifying predictors of response to ICIs is not known. Methods Detailed clinical annotation and response data were collected for patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer treated with anti-programmed death-1 or anti-programmed death-ligand 1 [anti-programmed cell death (PD)-1] therapy and profiled by targeted NGS (MSK-IMPACT; n = 240). Efficacy was assessed by Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) version 1.1, and durable clinical benefit (DCB) was defined as partial response/stable disease that lasted > 6 months. Tumor mutation burden (TMB), fraction of copy number-altered genome, and gene alterations were compared among patients with DCB and no durable benefit (NDB). Whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed for 49 patients to compare quantification of TMB by targeted NGS versus WES. Results Estimates of TMB by targeted NGS correlated well with WES (ρ = 0.86; P < .001). TMB was greater in patients with DCB than with NDB ( P = .006). DCB was more common, and progression-free survival was longer in patients at increasing thresholds above versus below the 50th percentile of TMB (38.6% v 25.1%; P < .001; hazard ratio, 1.38; P = .024). The fraction of copy number-altered genome was highest in those with NDB. Variants in EGFR and STK11 associated with a lack of benefit. TMB and PD-L1 expression were independent variables, and a composite of TMB plus PD-L1 further enriched for benefit to ICIs. Conclusion Targeted NGS accurately estimates TMB and elevated TMB further improved likelihood of benefit to ICIs. TMB did not correlate with PD-L1 expression; both variables had similar predictive capacity. The incorporation of both TMB and PD-L1 expression into multivariable predictive models should result in greater predictive power.


Epigenetics | 2013

Recurrent patterns of DNA methylation in the ZNF154,CASP8, and VHL promoters across a wide spectrum of human solid epithelial tumors and cancer cell lines

Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Valer Gotea; Hanna M. Petrykowska; Gennady Margolin; Thomas C. Krivak; Julie A. DeLoia; Daphne W. Bell; Laura Elnitski

The study of aberrant DNA methylation in cancer holds the key to the discovery of novel biological markers for diagnostics and can help to delineate important mechanisms of disease. We have identified 12 loci that are differentially methylated in serous ovarian cancers and endometrioid ovarian and endometrial cancers with respect to normal control samples. The strongest signal showed hypermethylation in tumors at a CpG island within the ZNF154 promoter. We show that hypermethylation of this locus is recurrent across solid human epithelial tumor samples for 15 of 16 distinct cancer types from TCGA. Furthermore, ZNF154 hypermethylation is strikingly present across a diverse panel of ENCODE cell lines, but only in those derived from tumor cells. By extending our analysis from the Illumina 27K Infinium platform to the 450K platform, to sequencing of PCR amplicons from bisulfite treated DNA, we demonstrate that hypermethylation extends across the breadth of the ZNF154 CpG island. We have also identified recurrent hypomethylation in two genomic regions associated with CASP8 and VHL. These three genes exhibit significant negative correlation between methylation and gene expression across many cancer types, as well as patterns of DNaseI hypersensitivity and histone marks that reflect different chromatin accessibility in cancer vs. normal cell lines. Our findings emphasize hypermethylation of ZNF154 as a biological marker of relevance for tumor identification. Epigenetic modifications affecting the promoters of ZNF154, CASP8, and VHL are shared across a vast array of tumor types and may therefore be important for understanding the genomic landscape of cancer.


Cancer Discovery | 2018

Genetic Predictors of Response to Systemic Therapy in Esophagogastric Cancer

Yelena Y. Janjigian; Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Philip Jonsson; Walid K. Chatila; Jaclyn F. Hechtman; Geoffrey Y. Ku; Jamie Riches; Yaelle Tuvy; Ritika Kundra; Nancy Bouvier; Efsevia Vakiani; Jianjiong Gao; Zachary J. Heins; Benjamin E. Gross; David P. Kelsen; Liying Zhang; Vivian E. Strong; Mark A. Schattner; Hans Gerdes; Daniel G. Coit; Manjit S. Bains; Zsofia K. Stadler; Valerie W. Rusch; David R. Jones; Daniela Molena; Jinru Shia; Mark E. Robson; Marinela Capanu; Sumit Middha; Ahmet Zehir

The incidence of esophagogastric cancer is rapidly rising, but only a minority of patients derive durable benefit from current therapies. Chemotherapy as well as anti-HER2 and PD-1 antibodies are standard treatments. To identify predictive biomarkers of drug sensitivity and mechanisms of resistance, we implemented prospective tumor sequencing of patients with metastatic esophagogastric cancer. There was no association between homologous recombination deficiency defects and response to platinum-based chemotherapy. Patients with microsatellite instability-high tumors were intrinsically resistant to chemotherapy but more likely to achieve durable responses to immunotherapy. The single Epstein-Barr virus-positive patient achieved a durable, complete response to immunotherapy. The level of ERBB2 amplification as determined by sequencing was predictive of trastuzumab benefit. Selection for a tumor subclone lacking ERBB2 amplification, deletion of ERBB2 exon 16, and comutations in the receptor tyrosine kinase, RAS, and PI3K pathways were associated with intrinsic and/or acquired trastuzumab resistance. Prospective genomic profiling can identify patients most likely to derive durable benefit to immunotherapy and trastuzumab and guide strategies to overcome drug resistance.Significance: Clinical application of multiplex sequencing can identify biomarkers of treatment response to contemporary systemic therapies in metastatic esophagogastric cancer. This large prospective analysis sheds light on the biological complexity and the dynamic nature of therapeutic resistance in metastatic esophagogastric cancers. Cancer Discov; 8(1); 49-58. ©2017 AACR.See related commentary by Sundar and Tan, p. 14See related article by Pectasides et al., p. 37This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1.


Cancer Cell | 2018

Clinical Sequencing Defines the Genomic Landscape of Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

Rona Yaeger; Walid K. Chatila; Marla Lipsyc; Jaclyn F. Hechtman; Andrea Cercek; Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Gowtham Jayakumaran; Sumit Middha; Ahmet Zehir; Mark T.A. Donoghue; Daoqi You; Agnes Viale; Nancy E. Kemeny; Neil Howard Segal; Zsofia K. Stadler; Anna M. Varghese; Ritika Kundra; Jianjiong Gao; Aijazuddin Syed; David M. Hyman; Efsevia Vakiani; Neal Rosen; Barry S. Taylor; Marc Ladanyi; Michael F. Berger; David B. Solit; Jinru Shia; Leonard Saltz; Nikolaus Schultz

Metastatic colorectal cancers (mCRCs) are clinically heterogeneous, but the genomic basis of this variability remains poorly understood. We performed prospective targeted sequencing of 1,134 CRCs. We identified splice alterations in intronic regions of APC and large in-frame deletions in CTNNB1, increasing oncogenic WNT pathway alterations to 96% of CRCs. Right-sided primary site in microsatellite stable mCRC was associated with shorter survival, older age at diagnosis, increased mutations, and enrichment of oncogenic alterations in KRAS, BRAF, PIK3CA, AKT1, RNF43, and SMAD4 compared with left-sided primaries. Left-sided tumors frequently had no identifiable genetic alteration in mitogenic signaling, but exhibited higher mitogenic ligand expression. Our results suggest different pathways to tumorigenesis in right- and left-sided microsatellite stable CRC that may underlie clinical differences.


Cancer Cell | 2018

Genomic Features of Response to Combination Immunotherapy in Patients with Advanced Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer

Matthew D. Hellmann; Tavi Nathanson; Hira Rizvi; Benjamin C. Creelan; Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Arun Ahuja; Ai Ni; Jacki B. Novik; Levi Mangarin; Mohsen Abu-Akeel; Cailian Liu; Jennifer Sauter; Natasha Rekhtman; Eliza Chang; Margaret K. Callahan; Jamie E. Chaft; Martin H. Voss; Megan Tenet; Xuemei Li; Kelly Covello; Andrea Renninger; Patrik Vitazka; William J. Geese; Hossein Borghaei; Charles M. Rudin; Scott Antonia; Charles Swanton; Jeff Hammerbacher; Taha Merghoub; Nicholas McGranahan

Summary Combination immune checkpoint blockade has demonstrated promising benefit in lung cancer, but predictors of response to combination therapy are unknown. Using whole-exome sequencing to examine non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with PD-1 plus CTLA-4 blockade, we found that high tumor mutation burden (TMB) predicted improved objective response, durable benefit, and progression-free survival. TMB was independent of PD-L1 expression and the strongest feature associated with efficacy in multivariable analysis. The low response rate in TMB low NSCLCs demonstrates that combination immunotherapy does not overcome the negative predictive impact of low TMB. This study demonstrates the association between TMB and benefit to combination immunotherapy in NSCLC. TMB should be incorporated in future trials examining PD-(L)1 with CTLA-4 blockade in NSCLC.


Cancer Cell | 2017

Conditional Selection of Genomic Alterations Dictates Cancer Evolution and Oncogenic Dependencies

Franck Raynaud; Daniele Tavernari; Elena Battistello; Stephanie Sungalee; Sadegh Saghafinia; Titouan Laessle; Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Nikolaus Schultz; Elisa Oricchio; Giovanni Ciriello

Cancer evolves through the emergence and selection of molecular alterations. Cancer genome profiling has revealed that specific events are more or less likely to be co-selected, suggesting that the selection of one event depends on the others. However, the nature of these evolutionary dependencies and their impact remain unclear. Here, we designed SELECT, an algorithmic approach to systematically identify evolutionary dependencies from alteration patterns. By analyzing 6,456 genomes from multiple tumor types, we constructed a map of oncogenic dependencies associated with cellular pathways, transcriptional readouts, and therapeutic response. Finally, modeling of cancer evolution shows that alteration dependencies emerge only under conditional selection. These results provide a framework for the design of strategies to predict cancer progression and therapeutic response.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2016

A Multi-Method Approach for Proteomic Network Inference in 11 Human Cancers.

Yasin Şenbabaoğlu; Selcuk Onur Sumer; Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Debra Bemis; Giovanni Ciriello; Nikolaus Schultz; Chris Sander

Protein expression and post-translational modification levels are tightly regulated in neoplastic cells to maintain cellular processes known as ‘cancer hallmarks’. The first Pan-Cancer initiative of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) Research Network has aggregated protein expression profiles for 3,467 patient samples from 11 tumor types using the antibody based reverse phase protein array (RPPA) technology. The resultant proteomic data can be utilized to computationally infer protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks and to study the commonalities and differences across tumor types. In this study, we compare the performance of 13 established network inference methods in their capacity to retrieve the curated Pathway Commons interactions from RPPA data. We observe that no single method has the best performance in all tumor types, but a group of six methods, including diverse techniques such as correlation, mutual information, and regression, consistently rank highly among the tested methods. We utilize the high performing methods to obtain a consensus network; and identify four robust and densely connected modules that reveal biological processes as well as suggest antibody–related technical biases. Mapping the consensus network interactions to Reactome gene lists confirms the pan-cancer importance of signal transduction pathways, innate and adaptive immune signaling, cell cycle, metabolism, and DNA repair; and also suggests several biological processes that may be specific to a subset of tumor types. Our results illustrate the utility of the RPPA platform as a tool to study proteomic networks in cancer.


Epigenetics & Chromatin | 2015

Pan-cancer stratification of solid human epithelial tumors and cancer cell lines reveals commonalities and tissue-specific features of the CpG island methylator phenotype.

Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Valer Gotea; Gennady Margolin; Laura Elnitski

BackgroundThe term CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP) has been used to describe widespread DNA hypermethylation at CpG-rich genomic regions affecting clinically distinct subsets of cancer patients. Even though there have been numerous studies of CIMP in individual cancer types, a uniform analysis across tissues is still lacking.ResultsWe analyze genome-wide patterns of CpG island hypermethylation in 5,253 solid epithelial tumors from 15 cancer types from TCGA and 23 cancer cell lines from ENCODE. We identify differentially methylated loci that define CIMP+ and CIMP− samples, and we use unsupervised clustering to provide a robust molecular stratification of tumor methylomes for 12 cancer types and all cancer cell lines. With a minimal set of 89 discriminative loci, we demonstrate accurate pan-cancer separation of the 12 CIMP+/− subpopulations, based on their average levels of methylation. Tumor samples in different CIMP subclasses show distinctive correlations with gene expression profiles and recurrence of somatic mutations, copy number variations, and epigenetic silencing. Enrichment analyses indicate shared canonical pathways and upstream regulators for CIMP-targeted regions across cancer types. Furthermore, genomic alterations showing consistent associations with CIMP+/− status include genes involved in DNA repair, chromatin remodeling genes, and several histone methyltransferases. Associations of CIMP status with specific clinical features, including overall survival in several cancer types, highlight the importance of the CIMP+/− designation for individual tumor evaluation and personalized medicine.ConclusionsWe present a comprehensive computational study of CIMP that reveals pan-cancer commonalities and tissue-specific differences underlying concurrent hypermethylation of CpG islands across tumors. Our stratification of solid tumors and cancer cell lines based on CIMP status is data-driven and agnostic to tumor type by design, which protects against known biases that have hindered classic methods previously used to define CIMP. The results that we provide can be used to refine existing molecular subtypes of cancer into more homogeneously behaving subgroups, potentially leading to more uniform responses in clinical trials.


Nature Communications | 2017

CDK4/6 or MAPK blockade enhances efficacy of EGFR inhibition in oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma

Jin Zhou; Zhong Wu; Gabrielle S. Wong; Eirini Pectasides; Ankur K. Nagaraja; Matthew D. Stachler; Haikuo Zhang; Ting Chen; Haisheng Zhang; Jie Bin Liu; Xinsen Xu; Ewa Sicinska; Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Anil K. Rustgi; J. Alan Diehl; Kwok-Kin Wong; Adam J. Bass

Oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma is a deadly disease where systemic therapy has relied upon empiric chemotherapy despite the presence of genomic alterations pointing to candidate therapeutic targets, including recurrent amplification of the gene encoding receptor tyrosine kinase epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Here, we demonstrate that EGFR-targeting small-molecule inhibitors have efficacy in EGFR-amplified oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC), but may become quickly ineffective. Resistance can occur following the emergence of epithelial–mesenchymal transition and by reactivation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway following EGFR blockade. We demonstrate that blockade of this rebound activation with MEK (mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase) inhibition enhances EGFR inhibitor-induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest, and delays resistance to EGFR monotherapy. Furthermore, genomic profiling shows that cell cycle regulators are altered in the majority of EGFR-amplified tumours and a combination of cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 (CDK4/6) and EGFR inhibitors prevents the emergence of resistance in vitro and in vivo. These data suggest that upfront combination strategies targeting EGFR amplification, guided by adaptive pathway reactivation or by co-occurring genomic alterations, should be tested clinically.


Biomolecules | 2016

The Emergence of Pan-Cancer CIMP and Its Elusive Interpretation

Brendan Miller; Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Laura Elnitski

Epigenetic dysregulation is recognized as a hallmark of cancer. In the last 16 years, a CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP) has been documented in tumors originating from different tissues. However, a looming question in the field is whether or not CIMP is a pan-cancer phenomenon or a tissue-specific event. Here, we give a synopsis of the history of CIMP and describe the pattern of DNA methylation that defines the CIMP phenotype in different cancer types. We highlight new conceptual approaches of classifying tumors based on CIMP in a cancer type-agnostic way that reveal the presence of distinct CIMP tumors in a multitude of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) datasets, suggesting that this phenotype may transcend tissue-type specificity. Lastly, we show evidence supporting the clinical relevance of CIMP-positive tumors and suggest that a common CIMP etiology may define new mechanistic targets in cancer treatment.

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Nikolaus Schultz

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Marc Ladanyi

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Michael F. Berger

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Walid K. Chatila

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Jaclyn F. Hechtman

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Ahmet Zehir

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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David B. Solit

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Ritika Kundra

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Efsevia Vakiani

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Rona Yaeger

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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