Request for Letters of Interest (LOI) for NCI-MATCH Laboratories, 39201-39203 [2020-14044]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 126 / Tuesday, June 30, 2020 / Notices
Dated: June 25, 2020.
Miguelina Perez,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
[FR Doc. 2020–14058 Filed 6–29–20; 8:45 am]
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Place: National Institutes of Health,
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Dated: June 24, 2020.
Ronald J. Livingston, Jr.,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
[FR Doc. 2020–14022 Filed 6–29–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Request for Letters of Interest (LOI) for
NCI–MATCH Laboratories
National Institutes of Health,
Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice, extension.
AGENCY:
The National Cancer Institute
(NCI) through its National Clinical
Trials Network (NCTN) is developing a
successor precision medicine trial to
‘NCI-Molecular Analysis for Therapy
Choice (NCI–MATCH)’ entitled ‘NCIComboMATCH’. The principal of this
intiative is to overcome drug resistance
to single-agent therapy by developing
genomically-directed targeted agent
combinations. All combinations must be
supported by robust, preclinical in vivo
evidence. Due to the coronavirus
pandemic the NCI is providing an
extension of the previously published
notice in the Federal Register on March
11, 2020 to allow candidate more time
to submit LOIs. NCI-ComboMATCH trial
leadership invites applications for
SUMMARY:
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39201
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-ComboMATCH trial. In order
to support this trial, the designated
laboratories participating in NCIComboMATCH will identify patients for
the specific variants needed for trial
eligibility. Laboratories will be required
to contact any of the NCTN sites that
have activated NCI-ComboMATCH if a
specimen sent from one of these sites
has a variant(s) that would potentially
make the patient eligible for one of the
treatment arms.
DATES: The due date for Letters of
Interest (LOIs), published on March 11,
2020 (85 FR 14208), has been extended
and should now be submitted to the
National Cancer Institute (NCI),
National Institutes of Health (NIH) on or
before 5:00 p.m. EST on September 30,
2020.
ADDRESSES: Submit LOIs by email to
NCICOMBOMATCHLabApps@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
NCICOMBOMATCHLabApps@nih.gov.
James V. Tricoli, 240–276–5725 or
tricolij@mail.nih.gov, can also provide
further information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice was previously published in the
Federal Register on March 11, 2020,
page 14208–14210 (85 FR 14208). The
purpose of this notice is to allow an
additional 90 days for submission of the
LOI. The due date for LOI submission
has been extended from the previous
date of June 30, 2020 to September 30,
2020 to allow more labs to submit. This
is necessary due to the impact of the
coronavirus pandemic. In accordance
with 42 U.S.C. 285, of the Public Health
Service Act, as amended. Similar to
NCI–MATCH, NCI-ComboMATCH is
conceived as a signal-seeking study. The
NCI-ComboMATCH team will
determine whether patients with tumor
mutations, amplifications or
translocations in the genetic pathway(s)
of interest are likely to derive clinical
benefit if treated with a combination of
precision medicine agents targeting
those specific pathway(s). This
recruitment is for labs that can
specifically screen 200 patients seen at
NCTN sites per month.
Patients with histologically
documented solid tumors, lymphomas
and multiple myeloma whose disease
has progressed following at least one
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 126 / Tuesday, June 30, 2020 / Notices
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line of standard systemic therapy or for
whom no standard therapy exists are
eligible if they meet the eligibility
criteria for the trial.
The selected collaborating outside
laboratories may only act (i.e., refer
patients) on any of the 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.
Only CLIA accredited/certified
laboratories located in the United States
may be considered for addition to the
laboratory network.
Letter of Interest (LOI) and
Confidentiality Agreement
Candidate laboratories should submit
a letter of interest to
NCICOMBOMATCHLabApps@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 on patients per
month
• Number assays on patients seen at
NCTN study sites per month
• What other CLIA approved/certified
tests have been validated in your
laboratory?
• Willingness to contact sites regarding
results with a potentially eligible for
NCI-ComboMATCH
• Willingness to sign a collaboration
agreement with NCI (https://
ctep.cancer.gov/branches/rab/
intellectual_property_option_to_
collaborators.htm) and to share data
and publication rights
Following an acceptable eligibility
review to the NCI-Combo 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 (approved at that time). The lab
would then be required to submit an
application within 2 months for review
by the NCI-Combo MATCH review
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.
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• Assays can be on tumor tissue
(including lymphoma) or circulating
tumor DNA (ctDNA).
• Laboratory NGS panels must be
analytically and clinically validated on
DNA from human tumor tissue, 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)
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-ComboMATCH)
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 available variant arms.
• Academic laboratories must be
located at a center that participates in
NCI- Combo MATCH.
• The designated lab should be
willing to provide residual nucleic acid
from the sample they tested if the
patient enrolls on NCI-ComboMATCH
• Laboratories shall NOT advertise
that they are screening laboratories for
ComboMATCH eligibility without prior
review by NCI and ECOG–ACRIN. Any
press release or public disclosure
requires clearance by NCI and the NCIComboMATCH team.
• Laboratories must agree to use the
existing workflow established by the
NCI NCI-ComboMATCH trial team to
identify patients for the variant arms.
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 NCIComboMATCH.
Æ Laboratories must notify NCIComboMATCH sites that the laboratory
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
results would potentially allow the
patient to be eligible for NCIComboMATCH.
Æ Laboratories must track how many
assays per month detect rare variants
that could make a patient eligible for
NCI-ComboMATCH.
Æ If the clinician presents the NCIComboMATCH study and the patient is
eligible and desires to enter the study,
the laboratory must agree to enter the
results into the informatics system that
assigns treatment in NCI-ComboMATCH
(MATCHbox).
Æ Laboratories must have a way to
answer questions from NCIComboMATCH sites about their assay
and must have a contact person for
optimal communication with the NCIComboMATCH 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-ComboMATCH trial (https://
ctep.cancer.gov/branches/rab/
intellectual_property_option_to_
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-ComboMATCH 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 Confidentiality Agreement’’
to NCICOMBOMATCHLabApps@
nih.gov.
2. LOIs will be accepted for 3 months
from the date of this notice. LOIs will
be reviewed immediately upon receipt.
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.
4. Applications that have not been
submitted within 6 weeks of notification
of acceptance of the LOI will be deactivated and not further considered.
5. DO NOT send a full application
until you are invited to do so.
Review criteria for LOI:
Laboratory is a CLIA-certified
laboratory within the United States.
Academic laboratories must have NCIComboMATCH open at their site.
E:\FR\FM\30JNN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 126 / Tuesday, June 30, 2020 / Notices
Laboratory NGS assay has adequate
sensitivity and specificity.
Laboratory tests tumor tissue for rare
variants as described in NCIComboMATCH.
Laboratory agrees to provide needed
information for evaluation of the
analytical validity of the test.
Laboratory is likely to screen at least
200 patients at NCTN sites per month
for NCI-ComboMATCH.
Laboratory agrees to contact sites
regarding NCI-ComboMATCH
eligibility.
Laboratory agrees to a collaboration
with NCI as detailed above.
Review criteria for full application:
Laboratory supplies evidence that the
assay meets analytical requirements as
detailed above.
Laboratories are capable of contacting
clinical sites, tracking activity, and
screening at least 200 patients at NCTN
sites per month to the study based on
detection of potential variants.
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 NCIComboMATCH study and to collaborate
fully with the NCI-ComboMATCH team.
For more information, contact
NCICOMBOMATCHLabApps@nih.gov.
Dated: June 24, 2020.
James V. Tricoli,
Chief, Diagnostic Biomarkers and Technology
Branch, Cancer Diagnosis Program, National
Cancer Institute.
[FR Doc. 2020–14044 Filed 6–29–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration
Current List of HHS-Certified
Laboratories and Instrumented Initial
Testing Facilities Which Meet Minimum
Standards To Engage in Urine and Oral
Fluid Drug Testing for Federal
Agencies
Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA), Health and Human Services
(HHS).
ACTION: Notice.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY:
The Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) notifies federal
agencies of the laboratories and
Instrumented Initial Testing Facilities
(IITFs) currently certified to meet the
standards of the Mandatory Guidelines
SUMMARY:
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18:18 Jun 29, 2020
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for Federal Workplace Drug Testing
Programs using Urine or Oral Fluid
(Mandatory Guidelines).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Anastasia Donovan, Division of
Workplace Programs, SAMHSA/CSAP,
5600 Fishers Lane, Room 16N06B,
Rockville, Maryland 20857; 240–276–
2600 (voice); Anastasia.Donovan@
samhsa.hhs.gov (email).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A notice
listing all currently HHS-certified
laboratories and IITFs is published in
the Federal Register during the first
week of each month. If any laboratory or
IITF certification is suspended or
revoked, the laboratory or IITF will be
omitted from subsequent lists until such
time as it is restored to full certification
under the Mandatory Guidelines.
If any laboratory or IITF has
withdrawn from the HHS National
Laboratory Certification Program (NLCP)
during the past month, it will be listed
at the end and will be omitted from the
monthly listing thereafter.
This notice is also available on the
internet at https://www.samhsa.gov/
workplace/resources/drug-testing/
certified-lab-list.
The Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) notifies federal agencies
of the laboratories and Instrumented
Initial Testing Facilities (IITFs)
currently certified to meet the standards
of the Mandatory Guidelines for Federal
Workplace Drug Testing Programs
(Mandatory Guidelines) using Urine and
of the laboratories currently certified to
meet the standards of the Mandatory
Guidelines using Oral Fluid.
The Mandatory Guidelines using
Urine were first published in the
Federal Register on April 11, 1988 (53
FR 11970), and subsequently revised in
the Federal Register on June 9, 1994 (59
FR 29908); September 30, 1997 (62 FR
51118); April 13, 2004 (69 FR 19644);
November 25, 2008 (73 FR 71858);
December 10, 2008 (73 FR 75122); April
30, 2010 (75 FR 22809); and on January
23, 2017 (82 FR 7920).
The Mandatory Guidelines using Oral
Fluid were first published in the
Federal Register on October 25, 2019
(84 FR 57554) with an effective date of
January 1, 2020.
The Mandatory Guidelines were
initially developed in accordance with
Executive Order 12564 and section 503
of Public Law 100–71 and allowed urine
drug testing only. The Mandatory
Guidelines using Urine have since been
revised, and new Mandatory Guidelines
allowing for oral fluid drug testing have
been published. The Mandatory
Guidelines require strict standards that
laboratories and IITFs must meet in
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
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39203
order to conduct drug and specimen
validity tests on specimens for federal
agencies. HHS does not allow IITFs for
oral fluid testing.
To become certified, an applicant
laboratory or IITF must undergo three
rounds of performance testing plus an
on-site inspection. To maintain that
certification, a laboratory or IITF must
participate in a quarterly performance
testing program plus undergo periodic,
on-site inspections.
Laboratories and IITFs in the
applicant stage of certification are not to
be considered as meeting the minimum
requirements described in the HHS
Mandatory Guidelines using Urine and/
or Oral Fluid. An HHS-certified
laboratory or IITF must have its letter of
certification from HHS/SAMHSA
(formerly: HHS/NIDA), which attests
that the test facility has met minimum
standards. HHS does not allow IITFs for
oral fluid testing.
HHS-Certified Laboratories Certified To
Conduct Oral Fluid Drug Testing
In accordance with the Mandatory
Guidelines using Oral Fluid dated
October 25, 2019 (84 FR 57554), the
following HHS-certified laboratories
meet the minimum standards to conduct
drug and specimen validity tests on oral
fluid specimens:
At this time, there are no laboratories
certified to conduct drug and specimen
validity tests on oral fluid specimens.
HHS-Certified Instrumented Initial
Testing Facilities Certified To Conduct
Urine Drug Testing
In accordance with the Mandatory
Guidelines using Urine dated January
23, 2017 (82 FR 7920), the following
HHS-certified IITFs meet the minimum
standards to conduct drug and specimen
validity tests on urine specimens:
Dynacare, 6628 50th Street NW,
Edmonton, AB Canada T6B 2N7, 780–
784–1190 (Formerly: GammaDynacare Medical Laboratories)
HHS-Certified Laboratories Certified To
Conduct Urine Drug Testing
In accordance with the Mandatory
Guidelines using Urine dated January
23, 2017 (82 FR 7920), the following
HHS-certified laboratories meet the
minimum standards to conduct drug
and specimen validity tests on urine
specimens:
Alere Toxicology Services, 1111 Newton
St., Gretna, LA 70053, 504–361–8989/
800–433–3823 (Formerly: Kroll
Laboratory Specialists, Inc.,
Laboratory Specialists, Inc.)
Alere Toxicology Services, 450
Southlake Blvd., Richmond, VA
23236, 804–378–9130 (Formerly:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 126 (Tuesday, June 30, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 39201-39203]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-14044]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Request for Letters of Interest (LOI) for NCI-MATCH Laboratories
AGENCY: National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice, extension.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Cancer Institute (NCI) through its National
Clinical Trials Network (NCTN) is developing a successor precision
medicine trial to `NCI-Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (NCI-
MATCH)' entitled `NCI-ComboMATCH'. The principal of this intiative is
to overcome drug resistance to single-agent therapy by developing
genomically-directed targeted agent combinations. All combinations must
be supported by robust, preclinical in vivo evidence. Due to the
coronavirus pandemic the NCI is providing an extension of the
previously published notice in the Federal Register on March 11, 2020
to allow candidate more time to submit LOIs. NCI-ComboMATCH trial
leadership 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-ComboMATCH trial. In order to support
this trial, the designated laboratories participating in NCI-ComboMATCH
will identify patients for the specific variants needed for trial
eligibility. Laboratories will be required to contact any of the NCTN
sites that have activated NCI-ComboMATCH if a specimen sent from one of
these sites has a variant(s) that would potentially make the patient
eligible for one of the treatment arms.
DATES: The due date for Letters of Interest (LOIs), published on March
11, 2020 (85 FR 14208), has been extended and should now be submitted
to the National Cancer Institute (NCI), National Institutes of Health
(NIH) on or before 5:00 p.m. EST on September 30, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Submit LOIs by email to [email protected]. 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 [email protected]. James V. Tricoli,
240-276-5725 or [email protected], can also provide further
information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice was previously published in the
Federal Register on March 11, 2020, page 14208-14210 (85 FR 14208). The
purpose of this notice is to allow an additional 90 days for submission
of the LOI. The due date for LOI submission has been extended from the
previous date of June 30, 2020 to September 30, 2020 to allow more labs
to submit. This is necessary due to the impact of the coronavirus
pandemic. In accordance with 42 U.S.C. 285, of the Public Health
Service Act, as amended. Similar to NCI-MATCH, NCI-ComboMATCH is
conceived as a signal-seeking study. The NCI-ComboMATCH team will
determine whether patients with tumor mutations, amplifications or
translocations in the genetic pathway(s) of interest are likely to
derive clinical benefit if treated with a combination of precision
medicine agents targeting those specific pathway(s). This recruitment
is for labs that can specifically screen 200 patients seen at NCTN
sites per month.
Patients with histologically documented solid tumors, lymphomas and
multiple myeloma whose disease has progressed following at least one
[[Page 39202]]
line of standard systemic therapy or for whom no standard therapy
exists are eligible if they meet the eligibility criteria for the
trial.
The selected collaborating outside laboratories may only act (i.e.,
refer patients) on any of the 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.
Only CLIA accredited/certified laboratories located in the United
States may be considered for addition to the laboratory network.
Letter of Interest (LOI) and Confidentiality Agreement
Candidate laboratories should submit a letter of interest to
[email protected] 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 on patients per month
Number assays on patients seen at NCTN study sites per month
What other CLIA approved/certified tests have been validated
in your laboratory?
Willingness to contact sites regarding results with a
potentially eligible for NCI-ComboMATCH
Willingness to sign a collaboration agreement with NCI
(https://ctep.cancer.gov/branches/rab/intellectual_property_option_to_collaborators.htm) and to share data
and publication rights
Following an acceptable eligibility review to the NCI-Combo 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 (approved at that time).
The lab would then be required to submit an application within 2 months
for review by the NCI-Combo MATCH review 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 can be on tumor tissue (including lymphoma) or
circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA).
Laboratory NGS panels must be analytically and clinically
validated on DNA from human tumor tissue, 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-
ComboMATCH)
[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
available variant arms.
Academic laboratories must be located at a center that
participates in NCI- Combo MATCH.
The designated lab should be willing to provide residual
nucleic acid from the sample they tested if the patient enrolls on NCI-
ComboMATCH
Laboratories shall NOT advertise that they are screening
laboratories for ComboMATCH eligibility without prior review by NCI and
ECOG-ACRIN. Any press release or public disclosure requires clearance
by NCI and the NCI-ComboMATCH team.
Laboratories must agree to use the existing workflow
established by the NCI NCI-ComboMATCH trial team to identify patients
for the variant arms.
[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 NCI-ComboMATCH.
[cir] Laboratories must notify NCI-ComboMATCH sites that the
laboratory results would potentially allow the patient to be eligible
for NCI-ComboMATCH.
[cir] Laboratories must track how many assays per month detect rare
variants that could make a patient eligible for NCI-ComboMATCH.
[cir] If the clinician presents the NCI-ComboMATCH study and the
patient is eligible and desires to enter the study, the laboratory must
agree to enter the results into the informatics system that assigns
treatment in NCI-ComboMATCH (MATCHbox).
[cir] Laboratories must have a way to answer questions from NCI-
ComboMATCH sites about their assay and must have a contact person for
optimal communication with the NCI-ComboMATCH 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-
ComboMATCH trial (https://ctep.cancer.gov/branches/rab/intellectual_property_option_to_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-ComboMATCH 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 Confidentiality Agreement'' to
[email protected].
2. LOIs will be accepted for 3 months from the date of this notice.
LOIs will be reviewed immediately upon receipt.
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 6 weeks of
notification of acceptance of the LOI will be de-activated and not
further considered.
5. DO NOT send a full application until you are invited to do so.
Review criteria for LOI:
Laboratory is a CLIA-certified laboratory within the United States.
Academic laboratories must have NCI-ComboMATCH open at their site.
[[Page 39203]]
Laboratory NGS assay has adequate sensitivity and specificity.
Laboratory tests tumor tissue for rare variants as described in
NCI-ComboMATCH.
Laboratory agrees to provide needed information for evaluation of
the analytical validity of the test.
Laboratory is likely to screen at least 200 patients at NCTN sites
per month for NCI-ComboMATCH.
Laboratory agrees to contact sites regarding NCI-ComboMATCH
eligibility.
Laboratory agrees to a collaboration with NCI as detailed above.
Review criteria for full application:
Laboratory supplies evidence that the assay meets analytical
requirements as detailed above.
Laboratories are capable of contacting clinical sites, tracking
activity, and screening at least 200 patients at NCTN sites per month
to the study based on detection of potential variants.
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 NCI-
ComboMATCH study and to collaborate fully with the NCI-ComboMATCH team.
For more information, contact [email protected].
Dated: June 24, 2020.
James V. Tricoli,
Chief, Diagnostic Biomarkers and Technology Branch, Cancer Diagnosis
Program, National Cancer Institute.
[FR Doc. 2020-14044 Filed 6-29-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140-01-P