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Predicting response to radical (chemo)radiotherapy with circulating HPV DNA in locally advanced head and neck squamous carcinoma

Authors :
Christopher M. Nutting
Rosalind J. Cutts
David Gonzalez de Castro
Nicholas C. Turner
Jen Y Lee
Katie L. Newbold
Fuqiang Wang
Kevin J. Harrington
Isaac Garcia-Murillas
Lorna Grove
Shreerang Bhide
Tara Hurley
Source :
British Journal of Cancer, Lee, J Y, Garcia-Murillas, I, Cutts, R J, De Castro, D G, Grove, L, Hurley, T, Wang, F, Nutting, C, Newbold, K, Harrington, K, Turner, N & Bhide, S 2017, ' Predicting response to radical (chemo)radiotherapy with circulating HPV DNA in locally advanced head and neck squamous carcinoma ' British Journal of Cancer, vol. 117, no. 6, pp. 876-883 . DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2017.258
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

BACKGROUNDFollowing chemo-radiotherapy (CCRT) for human papilloma virus positive (HPV+) locally advanced head and neck cancer, patients frequently undergo unnecessary neck dissection (ND) and/or repeated biopsies for abnormal PET-CT, which causes significant morbidity. We assessed the role of circulating HPV DNA in identifying 'true' residual disease.METHODS We prospectively recruited test (n=55) and validation (n=33) cohorts. HPV status was confirmed by E7 RT-PCR. We developed a novel amplicon-based next generation sequencing assay (HPV16-detect) to detect circulating HPV DNA. Circulating HPV DNA levels post-CCRT were correlated to disease response (PET-CT).RESULTSIn pre-CCRT plasma, HPV-detect demonstrated 100% sensitivity and 93% specificity, and 90% sensitivity and 100% specificity for the test (27 HPV+) and validation (20 HPV+) cohorts, respectively. Thirty-six out of 37 patients (test and validation cohort) with complete samples-set had negative HPV-detect at end of treatment. Six patients underwent ND (3) and repeat primary site biopsies (3) for positive PET-CT but had no viable tumour. One patient had positive HPV-detect and positive PET-CT and liver biopsy, indicating 100% agreement for HPV-detect and residual cancer.CONCLUSIONSWe demonstrate that HPV16-detect is a highly sensitive and specific test for identification of HPV DNA in plasma at diagnosis. HPV DNA post-treatment correlates with clinical response.

Details

ISSN :
15321827
Volume :
117
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British journal of cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0a17641a6458757ca0e454b411e22ee0