
OncLive® On Air S16 Ep31: ctDNA Testing At Progression May Help Detect Resistance and Guide Sequencing in GIST: With Drs Jonathan Trent, MD, PhD, and Neeta Somaiah, MD
Mar 20, 2026
Neeta Somaiah, MD, professor and chair of Sarcoma Medical Oncology at MD Anderson, discusses molecular drivers and sequencing in GIST. They explore how ctDNA testing at progression can uncover secondary KIT resistance mutations. Short talks cover rarity of GIST, importance of specialist centers, mutation-informed treatment choices, and emerging combinations to tackle resistant clones.
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Send GIST Samples To Sarcoma Centers
- Do send GIST specimens to a sarcoma reference center and perform comprehensive mutation testing before systemic therapy decisions.
- Jonathan Trent and Neeta Somaiah stress many U.S. patients still lack upfront next-generation sequencing for actionable drivers.
GIST Molecular Landscape Is Mostly KIT Dominant
- Most primary GIST drivers are KIT alterations, mainly exon 11 (60–70%) and exon 9 (~9%), with PDGFRA in 5–8% and ~10–15% non‑KIT/PDGFRA cases.
- Neeta Somaiah notes rarer drivers include BRAF, NTRK fusions, and SDH‑deficient tumors that need broader NGS to detect.
Quadruple Negative GISTs May Reflect Test Limits
- A small subset of GISTs appear 'quadruple negative' with no identifiable driver on older panels, implying unknown biology.
- Somaiah recommends re-testing with newer, broader panels because assays improve detection of rare alterations.
