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Liquid biopsy tracking during sequential chemo-radiotherapy identifies distinct prognostic phenotypes in nasopharyngeal carcinoma

Authors :
Kuan Rui Lloyd Tan
Zhen-Yu Qi
Haitao Wang
Li Lin
Rui-Qi Liu
Jia-Wei Lv
Yue Chen
Ying Sun
Xiao-Dan Huang
Melvin L.K. Chua
Jun Ma
Lu-Lu Zhang
Yu Pei Chen
Si-Si Xu
Guan-Qun Zhou
Fo-Ping Chen
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2019), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2019.

Abstract

Liquid biopsies have the utility for detecting minimal residual disease in several cancer types. Here, we investigate if liquid biopsy tracking on-treatment informs on tumour phenotypes by longitudinally quantifying circulating Epstein-barr virus (EBV) DNA copy number in 673 nasopharyngeal carcinoma patients undergoing radical induction chemotherapy (IC) and chemo-radiotherapy (CRT). We observe significant inter-patient heterogeneity in viral copy number clearance that is classifiable into eight distinct patterns based on clearance kinetics and bounce occurrence, including a substantial proportion of complete responders (≈30%) to only one IC cycle. Using a supervised statistical clustering of disease relapse risks, we further bin these eight subgroups into four prognostic phenotypes (early responders, intermediate responders, late responders, and treatment resistant) that are correlated with efficacy of chemotherapy intensity. Taken together, we show that real-time monitoring of liquid biopsy response adds prognostic information, and has the potential utility for risk-adapted treatment de-intensification/intensification in nasopharyngeal carcinoma.<br />Liquid biopsies are emerging as a useful method for diagnosis and prognosis in cancer. Here, the authors show the prognostic value of monitoring the level of circulating Epstein-barr virus DNA throughout induction chemotherapy and chemo-radiotherapy and its potential utility for risk-adapted individualised therapy in nasopharyngeal carcinomapatients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1633164adbc9537d4b9907c54fc5a763