Request for Letters of Interest for NCI-MATCH Laboratories, 35976-35978 [2017-16203]
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35976
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 147 / Wednesday, August 2, 2017 / Notices
sradovich on DSKBCFCHB2PROD with NOTICES
applications, the disclosure of which
would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy.
Name of Committee: National Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Diseases Advisory
Council.
Date: September 6, 2017.
Open: 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Agenda: To present the Director’s Report
and other scientific presentations.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Natcher Building Forty-five, Conference
Rooms E1/E2, 45 Center Drive, Bethesda, MD
20892.
Closed: 3:45 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Natcher Building Forty-five, Conference
Rooms E1/E2, 45 Center Drive, Bethesda, MD
20892.
Contact Person: Brent B. Stanfield, Ph.D.,
Director, Division of Extramural Activities,
National Institutes of Diabetes and Digestive
and Kidney Diseases, 6707 Democracy Blvd.
Room 7323, MSC 5452, Bethesda, MD 20892,
(301) 594–8843, stanfibr@niddk.nih.gov.
Name of Committee: National Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Diseases Advisory
Council; Diabetes, Endocrinology and
Metabolic Diseases.
Date: September 6, 2017.
Closed: 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Natcher Building Forty-five, Natcher
Conference Center, Room E1, 45 Center
Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Open: 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Agenda: To review the Division’s scientific
and planning activities.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Natcher Building Forty-five, Natcher
Conference Center, Room E1, 45 Center
Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Contact Person: Brent B. Stanfield, Ph.D.,
Director, Division of Extramural Activities,
National Institutes of Diabetes and Digestive
and Kidney Diseases, 6707 Democracy Blvd.
Room 7323, MSC 5452, Bethesda, MD 20892,
(301) 594–8843, stanfibr@niddk.nih.gov.
Name of Committee: National Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Diseases Advisory
Council; Kidney, Urologic and Hematologic
Diseases.
Date: September 6, 2017.
Open: 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review the Division’s scientific
and planning activities.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Natcher Building Forty-five, Natcher
Conference Center, Room F2, 45 Center
Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Closed: 3:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Natcher Building Forty-five, Natcher
Conference Center, Room F2, 45 Center
Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Contact Person: Brent B. Stanfield, Ph.D.,
Director, Division of Extramural Activities,
National Institutes of Diabetes and Digestive
and Kidney Diseases, 6707 Democracy Blvd.
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Room 7323, MSC 5452, Bethesda, MD 20892,
(301) 594–8843, stanfibr@niddk.nih.gov.
Name of Committee: National Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Diseases Advisory
Council; Digestive Diseases and Nutrition.
Date: September 6, 2017.
Open: 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review the Division’s scientific
and planning activities.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Natcher Building Forty-five, Natcher
Conference Center, Room F1, 45 Center
Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Closed: 2:15 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Natcher Building Forty-five, Natcher
Conference Center, Room F1, 45 Center
Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Contact Person: Brent B. Stanfield, Ph.D.,
Director, Division of Extramural Activities,
National Institutes of Diabetes and Digestive
and Kidney Diseases, 6707 Democracy Blvd.
Room 7323, MSC 5452, Bethesda, MD 20892,
(301) 594–8843, stanfibr@niddk.nih.gov.
Any interested person may file written
comments with the committee by forwarding
the statement to the Contact Person listed on
this notice. The statement should include the
name, address, telephone number and when
applicable, the business or professional
affiliation of the interested person.
In the interest of security, NIH has
instituted stringent procedures for entrance
onto the NIH campus. All visitor vehicles,
including taxicabs, hotel, and airport shuttles
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or passport) and to state the purpose of their
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Information is also available on the
Institute’s/Center’s home page:
www.niddk.nih.gov/fund/divisions/DEA/
Council/coundesc.htm., where an agenda and
any additional information for the meeting
will be posted when available.
(Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program Nos. 93.847, Diabetes,
Endocrinology and Metabolic Research;
93.848, Digestive Diseases and Nutrition
Research; 93.849, Kidney Diseases, Urology
and Hematology Research, National Institutes
of Health, HHS)
Dated: July 27, 2017.
David Clary,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
[FR Doc. 2017–16192 Filed 8–1–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Request for Letters of Interest for NCI–
MATCH Laboratories
The National Cancer Institute
(NCI) in collaboration with the NCI
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice
(MATCH) trial leadership (NCT
02465060) invites applications for
Clinical Laboratory Improvements
Program (CLIA) certified/accredited
laboratories that test tumor specimens
from patients utilizing Next Generation
Sequencing (NGS) assays to participate
in the NCI MATCH trial. The NCI
MATCH trial has implemented a new
process for identifying patients for arms
with rare variant eligibility criteria.
Laboratories will contact any of the
approximately 1100 sites that have
activated NCI MATCH if a specimen
sent from one of these sites has a rare
variant that would potentially make the
patient eligible for one of the treatment
arms open in this initiative.
DATES: LOIs should be submitted to the
National Cancer Institute (NCI),
National Institutes of Health (NIH) on or
before 5:00 p.m. EST on January 31,
2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit LOIs by email to
NCIMATCHLabApps@nih.gov. 9609
Medical Center Drive, 3 West, Room
526, MSC 9728, Rockville, MD 20892.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Questions about this request for LOIs
should be directed to
NCIMATCHLabApps@nih.gov. James V.
Tricoli tricolij@mail.nih.gov can also
provide further information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NCI–
MATCH aims to establish whether
patients with tumor mutations,
amplifications or translocations in one
of the genetic pathways of interest are
likely to derive clinical benefit (primary
objective: Objective response; secondary
objective: Progression-free survival of at
least 6 months) if treated with agents
targeting that specific pathway in a
single-arm design (see current arms
below).
Patients with histologically
documented solid tumors, lymphomas
and multiple myeloma whose disease
has progressed following at least one
line of standard systemic therapy or for
whom no standard therapy exists are
eligible if they meet the eligibility
criteria for the trial. Further information
about the NCI–MATCH trial may be
found at https://ecog-acrin.org/trials/ncimatch-eay131.
The selected collaborating
laboratories may only act (i.e., refer
patients) on any of the rare variant arms
for which their assay reports actionable
mutations of interest (aMOIs). The assay
must also report all exclusionary
variants for the arm unless these occur
at a frequency of >1% in cancer
patients.
CLIA accredited/certified laboratories
located in the United States may be
E:\FR\FM\02AUN1.SGM
02AUN1
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 147 / Wednesday, August 2, 2017 / Notices
considered for addition to the laboratory
network.
Letter of Interest (LOI) and
Collaboration Agreement
Candidate laboratories should submit
a letter of interest to
NCIMATCHLabApps@nih.gov stating:
• Statement of interest in the proposed
activity
• Laboratory name
• Lead contact name, address, email
address, and telephone number
• CLIA certification number
• Assay name
• Brief description of assay
Æ Sensitivity and specificity for
SNVs, indels, CNV, fusions
Æ Method of analysis
Æ Platform and variant calling
• Number of assays per month
• Number of patients whose assay
results would make them
potentially eligible for the rare
35977
variant arms (below) in the last 6
months
• Willingness to contact sites regarding
results with a rare variant
potentially eligible for NCI MATCH
• Willingness to sign a collaboration
agreement with NCI and to share
data and publication rights
• Which arms the laboratory is prepared
to address.
The arms that are included in the rare
variant protocol amendment are:
MATCH subprotocol
(agent)
AKT1 mut ......................................................................................................................................................
NF2 loss ........................................................................................................................................................
MET amplification .........................................................................................................................................
BRAF V600 ...................................................................................................................................................
SMO/PTCH1 .................................................................................................................................................
BRAF non V600 ............................................................................................................................................
EGFR T790M ................................................................................................................................................
ALK translocation ..........................................................................................................................................
cKIT mutation ................................................................................................................................................
EGFR mutation .............................................................................................................................................
ROS1 translocation .......................................................................................................................................
GNAQ/GNA11 ...............................................................................................................................................
MET exon 14 skipping ..................................................................................................................................
NTRK fusions ................................................................................................................................................
MTOR mutations ...........................................................................................................................................
TSC1 or TSC2 mutations .............................................................................................................................
CCND 1,2,3 amplifications ...........................................................................................................................
CDK4 or CDK6 amplification ........................................................................................................................
DDR2 mutation .............................................................................................................................................
sradovich on DSKBCFCHB2PROD with NOTICES
Rare variant candidate
EAY131–Y (AZD5363).
EAY131–U (Defactinib).
EAY131–C1 (Crizotinib).
EAY131–H (Dabrafenib + Trametinib).
EAY131–T (Vismodegib).
EAY131–R (Trametinib).
EAY131–E (AZD9291).
EAY131–F (Crizotinib).
EAY131–V (Sunitinib).
EAY131–A (Afatinib).
EAY131–G (Crizotinib).
EAY131–S2 (Trametinib).
EAY131–C2 (Crizotinib).
EAY131 Z1E (Loxo101).
EAY131–L (MLN0128).
EAY131–M (MLN0128).
EAY131–Z1B (Palbociclib).
EAY131–Z1C (Palbociclib).
EAY131–X (Dasatinib).
Following an acceptable eligibility
review to the NCI MATCH screening
committee, the laboratory would
execute a confidentiality agreement
with the NCI and will be provided with
a detailed list of eligibility and
exclusion variants for arms in which the
lab has interest. The lab would then be
required to submit an application
within 3 months for review by the NCI–
MATCH steering committee. Candidate
laboratories will be required to meet the
following general requirements:
• Testing must be performed in a
CLIA-certified or -accredited laboratory
located in the United States.
• Assays must be on tumor tissue
only (including lymphoma and
myeloma). Assays using circulating
nucleic acids will not be accepted at
this time.
• Laboratory NGS panels must be
analytically and clinically validated,
with performance characteristics as
follows:
Æ Specificity at least 99% for single
nucleotide variants, indels
Æ Sensitivity at least 95% for single
nucleotide variants, indels
Æ Sensitivity of 90% for copy number
variants (state fold of copy number
variants that can be detected with
90% sensitivity)
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Jkt 241001
Æ 99% reproducibility between
sequencers (if more than one
sequencer is used) and between
operators
Æ Lower limit of detection for SNV,
indels, CNV must be stated.
Laboratories must supply the
following information in their
application:
Æ Lower limit of % tumor accepted, and
whether (and which) enrichment
procedures are employed
Æ Whether the lab archives images of
slides from the tumor
Æ Whether the lab also runs germline as
well as tumor with the assay (a
simultaneous germline sequencing is
not required by NCI MATCH)
Æ A detailed description of assay
procedures, including starting
material, extraction of nucleic acids,
quality assurance, quality metrics,
data analysis and filters must be
supplied.
• Laboratory NGS test panels must
interrogate actionable mutations of
interest (aMOIs) required for enrollment
into the Rare Variant Arms (see table
above). Applicant laboratories must
state the MATCH arms in which they
would like to participate.
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
• Academic laboratories must be
located at a center that participates in
NCI MATCH.
• As it is important that the dataset
used for analysis in NCI MATCH be as
robust as possible, the laboratory NGS
test will require qualification, during
which the performance of the laboratory
will be compared with the NCI–MATCH
central laboratory test to ensure good
agreement with that assay. Concordance
between the results from each lab and
results of the NCI MATCH NGS assay
run on an archived specimen will be
tracked; if concordance falls below 90%
for SNVs and indels, or 80% for CNVs,
the laboratory must be willing to
address these issues with the NCI
MATCH team. If they cannot be
addressed to the satisfaction of the NCI
MATCH team, the laboratory may be
eliminated from participation in NCI
MATCH.
• Laboratories shall NOT advertise
that they are screening laboratories for
MATCH eligibility. Any press release or
public disclosure requires clearance by
NCI and NCI MATCH.
• Laboratories must agree to use the
existing workflow established by the
NCI MATCH trial to identify patients for
the Rare Variant Arms. This includes
use of the MATCH Rare Variant
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sradovich on DSKBCFCHB2PROD with NOTICES
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 147 / Wednesday, August 2, 2017 / Notices
template to identify aMOIs for
submission to MATCHbox.
Æ Laboratory results of NGS assays done
for clinical care will be the subject of
this initiative. There is no funding for
‘‘screening’’ a patient for MATCH.
Æ Laboratories must notify NCI MATCH
sites that the laboratory results would
potentially allow the patient to be
eligible for NCI MATCH.
Æ Laboratories must track how many
assays per week detect rare variants
that could make a patient eligible for
NCI MATCH.
Æ If the clinician presents the
MATCH study and the patient is
eligible and desires to enter the
study, the laboratory must agree to
fill out a spreadsheet that can be
used to put the results into the
informatics system that assigns
treatment in NCI MATCH
(MATCHbox).
Æ Laboratories must have a way to
answer questions from NCI MATCH
sites about their assay and must
have a contact person for optimal
communication with the NCI
MATCH team.
• Prior to participation, laboratories
must enter into a collaboration
agreement with NCI. A sample
agreement is available upon request. As
part of such a collaboration agreement,
laboratories must agree to provide the
licensing rights described in the CTEP
IP Option to the Pharmaceutical
Collaborators who provided agents for
the NCI MATCH trial (https://
ctep.cancer.gov/branches/rab/
intellectual_property_optionto_
collaborators.htm), as well as agree to
the data sharing and publication rights
consistent with those agreements.
• No reimbursement for these
activities (testing or notification of sites
of NCI MATCH eligibility) exists.
Qualified laboratories serving
underserved populations are
encouraged to participate.
How to apply:
1. Submit letter of interest (LOI) as
described above under ‘‘Letter of
Interest and Collaboration Agreement’’
to NCIMATCHLabApps@nih.gov.
2. LOIs will be accepted until January
31, 2018 at 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time. LOIs
will be reviewed on a monthly basis,
with those arriving by the 15th day of
the month being reviewed and answered
by the 15th day of the following month.
3. Notification of acceptance, nonacceptance or questions from Steering
Committee will be sent to the
designated contact person as soon as the
LOI has been reviewed. This
notification will include further
instructions if a full application is
invited.
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19:43 Aug 01, 2017
Jkt 241001
4. Applications that have not been
submitted within 3 months of
notification of acceptance will be deactivated, and a new LOI must then be
submitted if the laboratory wishes to
participate in NCI MATCH.
5. DO NOT send a full application
until you are invited to do so.
Review criteria for LOI:
• Laboratory is a CLIA certified or
accredited laboratory within the United
States.
• Academic laboratories must have
NCI MATCH open at their site.
• Laboratory has adequate sensitivity,
specificity.
• Laboratory tests tumor tissue for
rare variants as described in NCI
MATCH.
• Laboratory agrees to provide needed
information for evaluation of the
analytical validity of the test.
• Laboratory is likely to refer at least
100 patients to NCI MATCH based on
detection of rare variants in the past.
• Laboratory agrees to contact sites
regarding NCI MATCH eligibility.
• Laboratory agrees to a collaboration
with NCI as detailed above.
Review criteria for full application:
• Laboratory NGS assay interrogates
inclusionary and all exclusionary
variants for arms in which the
laboratory will participate.
• Laboratory supplies evidence that
the assay meets analytical requirements
as detailed above.
• Laboratories are capable of
contacting clinical sites, tracking
activity, and of referring at least 100
patients to the study based on detection
of rare variants in the past.
• Laboratories agree to execute a
collaboration agreement with NCI, as
well as to data sharing and sharing
publication rights.
• Laboratories agree to abide by the
procedures in place for the MATCH
study and to collaborate fully with the
MATCH team.
For more information, contact
NCIMATCHLabApps@nih.gov.
Dated: July 20, 2017.
James V. Tricoli,
Chief, Diagnostic Biomarkers and Technology
Development Branch, Cancer Diagnosis
Program, Division of Cancer Treatment and
Diagnosis, National Cancer Institute.
[FR Doc. 2017–16203 Filed 8–1–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
PO 00000
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Sfmt 4703
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
National Cancer Institute; Notice of
Closed Meeting
Pursuant to section 10(d) of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended (5 U.S.C. Appendix 2); notice
is hereby given of the following
meeting.
The meeting will be closed to the
public in accordance with the
provisions set forth in sections 552b(c)
(4) and 552b(c) (6), Title 5 U.S.C., as
amended. The purpose of this meeting
is to evaluate requests for preclinical
development resources for potential
new therapeutics for the treatment of
cancer. The outcome of the evaluation
will provide information to internal NCI
committees that will decide whether
NCI should support requests and make
available contract resources for
development of the potential
therapeutic to improve the treatment of
various forms of cancer. The research
proposals and the discussions could
disclose confidential trade secrets or
commercial property such as patentable
material, and personal information
concerning individuals associated with
the proposed research projects, the
disclosure of which would constitute a
clearly unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy.
Name of Committee: National Cancer
Institute Special Emphasis Panel; Jun2017
Cycle 26 NExT SEP Committee Meeting.
Date: August 31, 2017.
Time: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Agenda: To evaluate the NCI Experimental
Therapeutics Program Portfolio.
Place: National Institutes of Health, 9000
Rockville Pike, Building 31, Wing C, 6th
Floor, Conference Room 10, Bethesda, MD
20892.
Contact Persons: Barbara Mroczkowski,
Ph.D., Executive Secretary, Discovery
Experimental Therapeutics Program,
National Cancer Institute, NIH, 31 Center
Drive, Room 3A44, Bethesda, MD 20817
(301) 496–4291, mroczkoskib@mail.nih.gov.
Toby Hecht, Ph.D., Executive Secretary,
Development Experimental Therapeutics
Program, National Cancer Institute, NIH,
9609 Medical Center Drive, Room 3W110,
Rockville, MD 20850, (240) 276–5683,
toby.hecht2@nih.gov.
(Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program Nos. 93.392, Cancer Construction;
93.393, Cancer Cause and Prevention
Research; 93.394, Cancer Detection and
Diagnosis Research; 93.395, Cancer
Treatment Research; 93.396, Cancer Biology
Research; 93.397, Cancer Centers Support;
93.398, Cancer Research Manpower; 93.399,
Cancer Control, National Institutes of Health,
HHS)
E:\FR\FM\02AUN1.SGM
02AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 147 (Wednesday, August 2, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 35976-35978]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-16203]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Request for Letters of Interest for NCI-MATCH Laboratories
SUMMARY: The National Cancer Institute (NCI) in collaboration with the
NCI Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (MATCH) trial leadership (NCT
02465060) invites applications for Clinical Laboratory Improvements
Program (CLIA) certified/accredited laboratories that test tumor
specimens from patients utilizing Next Generation Sequencing (NGS)
assays to participate in the NCI MATCH trial. The NCI MATCH trial has
implemented a new process for identifying patients for arms with rare
variant eligibility criteria. Laboratories will contact any of the
approximately 1100 sites that have activated NCI MATCH if a specimen
sent from one of these sites has a rare variant that would potentially
make the patient eligible for one of the treatment arms open in this
initiative.
DATES: LOIs should be submitted to the National Cancer Institute (NCI),
National Institutes of Health (NIH) on or before 5:00 p.m. EST on
January 31, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit LOIs by email to NCIMATCHLabApps@nih.gov. 9609
Medical Center Drive, 3 West, Room 526, MSC 9728, Rockville, MD 20892.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Questions about this request for LOIs
should be directed to NCIMATCHLabApps@nih.gov. James V. Tricoli
tricolij@mail.nih.gov can also provide further information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NCI-MATCH aims to establish whether patients
with tumor mutations, amplifications or translocations in one of the
genetic pathways of interest are likely to derive clinical benefit
(primary objective: Objective response; secondary objective:
Progression-free survival of at least 6 months) if treated with agents
targeting that specific pathway in a single-arm design (see current
arms below).
Patients with histologically documented solid tumors, lymphomas and
multiple myeloma whose disease has progressed following at least one
line of standard systemic therapy or for whom no standard therapy
exists are eligible if they meet the eligibility criteria for the
trial. Further information about the NCI-MATCH trial may be found at
https://ecog-acrin.org/trials/nci-match-eay131.
The selected collaborating laboratories may only act (i.e., refer
patients) on any of the rare variant arms for which their assay reports
actionable mutations of interest (aMOIs). The assay must also report
all exclusionary variants for the arm unless these occur at a frequency
of >1% in cancer patients.
CLIA accredited/certified laboratories located in the United States
may be
[[Page 35977]]
considered for addition to the laboratory network.
Letter of Interest (LOI) and Collaboration Agreement
Candidate laboratories should submit a letter of interest to
NCIMATCHLabApps@nih.gov stating:
Statement of interest in the proposed activity
Laboratory name
Lead contact name, address, email address, and telephone
number
CLIA certification number
Assay name
Brief description of assay
[cir] Sensitivity and specificity for SNVs, indels, CNV, fusions
[cir] Method of analysis
[cir] Platform and variant calling
Number of assays per month
Number of patients whose assay results would make them
potentially eligible for the rare variant arms (below) in the last 6
months
Willingness to contact sites regarding results with a rare
variant potentially eligible for NCI MATCH
Willingness to sign a collaboration agreement with NCI and to
share data and publication rights
Which arms the laboratory is prepared to address.
The arms that are included in the rare variant protocol amendment
are:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rare variant candidate MATCH subprotocol (agent)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AKT1 mut....................................... EAY131-Y (AZD5363).
NF2 loss....................................... EAY131-U (Defactinib).
MET amplification.............................. EAY131-C1 (Crizotinib).
BRAF V600...................................... EAY131-H (Dabrafenib + Trametinib).
SMO/PTCH1...................................... EAY131-T (Vismodegib).
BRAF non V600.................................. EAY131-R (Trametinib).
EGFR T790M..................................... EAY131-E (AZD9291).
ALK translocation.............................. EAY131-F (Crizotinib).
cKIT mutation.................................. EAY131-V (Sunitinib).
EGFR mutation.................................. EAY131-A (Afatinib).
ROS1 translocation............................. EAY131-G (Crizotinib).
GNAQ/GNA11..................................... EAY131-S2 (Trametinib).
MET exon 14 skipping........................... EAY131-C2 (Crizotinib).
NTRK fusions................................... EAY131 Z1E (Loxo101).
MTOR mutations................................. EAY131-L (MLN0128).
TSC1 or TSC2 mutations......................... EAY131-M (MLN0128).
CCND 1,2,3 amplifications...................... EAY131-Z1B (Palbociclib).
CDK4 or CDK6 amplification..................... EAY131-Z1C (Palbociclib).
DDR2 mutation.................................. EAY131-X (Dasatinib).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following an acceptable eligibility review to the NCI MATCH
screening committee, the laboratory would execute a confidentiality
agreement with the NCI and will be provided with a detailed list of
eligibility and exclusion variants for arms in which the lab has
interest. The lab would then be required to submit an application
within 3 months for review by the NCI-MATCH steering committee.
Candidate laboratories will be required to meet the following general
requirements:
Testing must be performed in a CLIA-certified or -
accredited laboratory located in the United States.
Assays must be on tumor tissue only (including lymphoma
and myeloma). Assays using circulating nucleic acids will not be
accepted at this time.
Laboratory NGS panels must be analytically and clinically
validated, with performance characteristics as follows:
[cir] Specificity at least 99% for single nucleotide variants, indels
[cir] Sensitivity at least 95% for single nucleotide variants, indels
[cir] Sensitivity of 90% for copy number variants (state fold of copy
number variants that can be detected with 90% sensitivity)
[cir] 99% reproducibility between sequencers (if more than one
sequencer is used) and between operators
[cir] Lower limit of detection for SNV, indels, CNV must be stated.
Laboratories must supply the following information in their
application:
[cir] Lower limit of % tumor accepted, and whether (and which)
enrichment procedures are employed
[cir] Whether the lab archives images of slides from the tumor
[cir] Whether the lab also runs germline as well as tumor with the
assay (a simultaneous germline sequencing is not required by NCI MATCH)
[cir] A detailed description of assay procedures, including starting
material, extraction of nucleic acids, quality assurance, quality
metrics, data analysis and filters must be supplied.
Laboratory NGS test panels must interrogate actionable
mutations of interest (aMOIs) required for enrollment into the Rare
Variant Arms (see table above). Applicant laboratories must state the
MATCH arms in which they would like to participate.
Academic laboratories must be located at a center that
participates in NCI MATCH.
As it is important that the dataset used for analysis in
NCI MATCH be as robust as possible, the laboratory NGS test will
require qualification, during which the performance of the laboratory
will be compared with the NCI-MATCH central laboratory test to ensure
good agreement with that assay. Concordance between the results from
each lab and results of the NCI MATCH NGS assay run on an archived
specimen will be tracked; if concordance falls below 90% for SNVs and
indels, or 80% for CNVs, the laboratory must be willing to address
these issues with the NCI MATCH team. If they cannot be addressed to
the satisfaction of the NCI MATCH team, the laboratory may be
eliminated from participation in NCI MATCH.
Laboratories shall NOT advertise that they are screening
laboratories for MATCH eligibility. Any press release or public
disclosure requires clearance by NCI and NCI MATCH.
Laboratories must agree to use the existing workflow
established by the NCI MATCH trial to identify patients for the Rare
Variant Arms. This includes use of the MATCH Rare Variant
[[Page 35978]]
template to identify aMOIs for submission to MATCHbox.
[cir] Laboratory results of NGS assays done for clinical care will be
the subject of this initiative. There is no funding for ``screening'' a
patient for MATCH.
[cir] Laboratories must notify NCI MATCH sites that the laboratory
results would potentially allow the patient to be eligible for NCI
MATCH.
[cir] Laboratories must track how many assays per week detect rare
variants that could make a patient eligible for NCI MATCH.
[cir] If the clinician presents the MATCH study and the patient is
eligible and desires to enter the study, the laboratory must agree to
fill out a spreadsheet that can be used to put the results into the
informatics system that assigns treatment in NCI MATCH (MATCHbox).
[cir] Laboratories must have a way to answer questions from NCI
MATCH sites about their assay and must have a contact person for
optimal communication with the NCI MATCH team.
Prior to participation, laboratories must enter into a
collaboration agreement with NCI. A sample agreement is available upon
request. As part of such a collaboration agreement, laboratories must
agree to provide the licensing rights described in the CTEP IP Option
to the Pharmaceutical Collaborators who provided agents for the NCI
MATCH trial (https://ctep.cancer.gov/branches/rab/intellectual_property_optionto_collaborators.htm), as well as agree to
the data sharing and publication rights consistent with those
agreements.
No reimbursement for these activities (testing or
notification of sites of NCI MATCH eligibility) exists.
Qualified laboratories serving underserved populations are
encouraged to participate.
How to apply:
1. Submit letter of interest (LOI) as described above under
``Letter of Interest and Collaboration Agreement'' to
NCIMATCHLabApps@nih.gov.
2. LOIs will be accepted until January 31, 2018 at 5:00 p.m.
Eastern Time. LOIs will be reviewed on a monthly basis, with those
arriving by the 15th day of the month being reviewed and answered by
the 15th day of the following month.
3. Notification of acceptance, non-acceptance or questions from
Steering Committee will be sent to the designated contact person as
soon as the LOI has been reviewed. This notification will include
further instructions if a full application is invited.
4. Applications that have not been submitted within 3 months of
notification of acceptance will be de-activated, and a new LOI must
then be submitted if the laboratory wishes to participate in NCI MATCH.
5. DO NOT send a full application until you are invited to do so.
Review criteria for LOI:
Laboratory is a CLIA certified or accredited laboratory
within the United States.
Academic laboratories must have NCI MATCH open at their
site.
Laboratory has adequate sensitivity, specificity.
Laboratory tests tumor tissue for rare variants as
described in NCI MATCH.
Laboratory agrees to provide needed information for
evaluation of the analytical validity of the test.
Laboratory is likely to refer at least 100 patients to NCI
MATCH based on detection of rare variants in the past.
Laboratory agrees to contact sites regarding NCI MATCH
eligibility.
Laboratory agrees to a collaboration with NCI as detailed
above.
Review criteria for full application:
Laboratory NGS assay interrogates inclusionary and all
exclusionary variants for arms in which the laboratory will
participate.
Laboratory supplies evidence that the assay meets
analytical requirements as detailed above.
Laboratories are capable of contacting clinical sites,
tracking activity, and of referring at least 100 patients to the study
based on detection of rare variants in the past.
Laboratories agree to execute a collaboration agreement
with NCI, as well as to data sharing and sharing publication rights.
Laboratories agree to abide by the procedures in place for
the MATCH study and to collaborate fully with the MATCH team.
For more information, contact NCIMATCHLabApps@nih.gov.
Dated: July 20, 2017.
James V. Tricoli,
Chief, Diagnostic Biomarkers and Technology Development Branch, Cancer
Diagnosis Program, Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis, National
Cancer Institute.
[FR Doc. 2017-16203 Filed 8-1-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140-01-P