Back to Search Start Over

Circulating tumor DNA monitoring for early recurrence detection in epithelial ovarian cancer

Authors :
June Y. Hou
Jocelyn S. Chapman
Ekaterina Kalashnikova
William Pierson
Karen Smith-McCune
Geovanni Pineda
Reena Marie Vattakalam
Alexandra Ross
Meredith Mills
Carlos J. Suarez
Tracy Davis
Robert Edwards
Michelle Boisen
Sarah Sawyer
Hsin-Ta Wu
Scott Dashner
Vasily N. Aushev
Giby V. George
Meenakshi Malhotra
Bernhard Zimmermann
Himanshu Sethi
Adam C. ElNaggar
Alexey Aleshin
James M. Ford
Source :
Gynecologic oncology.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the most lethal gynecologic malignancy. We examined the utility of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) as a prognostic biomarker for EOC by assessing its relationship with patient outcome and CA-125, pre-surgically and during post-treatment surveillance.Plasma samples were collected from patients with stage I-IV EOC. Cohort A included patients with pre-surgical samples (N = 44, median follow-up: 2.7 years), cohort B and C included: patients with serially collected post-surgically (N = 12) and, during surveillance (N = 13), respectively (median follow-up: 2 years). Plasma samples were analyzed using a tumor-informed, personalized multiplex-PCR NGS assay; ctDNA status and CA-125 levels were correlated with clinical features and outcomes.Genomic profiling was performed on the entire cohort and was consistent with that seen in TCGA. In cohort A, ctDNA-positivity was observed in 73% (32/44) of presurgical samples and was higher in high nuclear grade disease. In cohort B and C, ctDNA was only detected in patients who relapsed (100% sensitivity and specificity) and preceded radiological findings by an average of 10 months. The presence of ctDNA at a single timepoint after completion of surgery +/- adjuvant chemotherapy and serially during surveillance was a strong predictor of relapse (HR:17.6, p = 0.001 and p0.0001, respectively), while CA-125 positivity was not (p = 0.113 and p = 0.056).The presence of ctDNA post-surgically is highly prognostic of reduced recurrence-free survival. CtDNA outperformed CA-125 in identifying patients at highest risk of recurrence. These results suggest that monitoring ctDNA could be beneficial in clinical decision-making for EOC patients.

Subjects

Subjects :
Oncology
Obstetrics and Gynecology

Details

ISSN :
10956859
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gynecologic oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2234080a11b6f95a4fdc29999cd997f8