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Personalized Treatment Selection and Disease Monitoring Using Circulating Tumor DNA Profiling in Real-World Cancer Patient Management

Authors :
Florian Scherer
Ulrike Philipp
Julius Wehrle
Christine Greil
Jesus Duque-Afonso
Marie Follo
Jan Braune
Max Deuter
Cornelius F. Waller
Frank Meiss
Anna Lena Illert
Ralph Fritsch
Justyna Rawluk
Michael Rassner
Martina Jolic
Nikolas von Bubnoff
Heiko Becker
Saskia Hussung
Justus Duyster
Silvia Waldeck
University of Zurich
von Bubnoff, Nikolas
Scherer, Florian
Source :
Diagnostics, Volume 10, Issue 8, Diagnostics, Vol 10, Iss 550, p 550 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Background: Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in the blood plasma of cancer patients is an emerging biomarker used across oncology, facilitating noninvasive disease monitoring and genetic profiling at various disease milestones. Digital droplet PCR (ddPCR) technologies have demonstrated high sensitivity and specificity for robust ctDNA detection at relatively low costs. Yet, their value for ctDNA-based management of a broad population of cancer patients beyond clinical trials remains elusive. Methods: We developed mutation-specific ddPCR assays that were optimized for their use in real-world cancer management, covering 12 genetic aberrations in common cancer genes, such as EGFR, BRAF, KIT, KRAS, and NRAS. We assessed the limit of detection (LOD) and the limit of blank (LOB) for each assay and validated their performance for ctDNA detection using matched tumor sequencing. Results: We applied our custom ddPCR assays to 352 plasma samples from 96 patients with solid tumors. Mutation detection in plasma was highly concordant with tumor sequencing, demonstrating high sensitivity and specificity across all assays. In 20 cases, radiographic cancer progression was mirrored by an increase of ctDNA concentrations or the occurrence of novel mutations in plasma. Moreover, ctDNA profiling at diagnosis and during disease progression reflected personalized treatment selection through the identification of actionable gene targets in 20 cases. Conclusion: Collectively, our work highlights the potential of ctDNA assessment by sensitive ddPCR for accurate disease monitoring, robust identification of resistance mutations, and upfront treatment selection in patients with solid tumors. We envision an increasing future role for ctDNA profiling within personalized cancer management in daily clinical routine.

Details

ISSN :
20754418
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diagnostics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2b6cbba25b64c47f05dc310e87a36360