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Plasma DNA as a 'liquid biopsy' incompletely complements tumor biopsy for identification of mutations in a case series of four patients with oligometastatic breast cancer

Authors :
Ananta Bhatt
Todd W. Miller
Jason D. Wells
Nancy J. McNulty
Richard J. Barth
Jennifer R. Bean
Jiang Gui
Mary D. Chamberlin
Wendy A. Wells
Peter A. Kaufman
Jonathan D. Marotti
Michael J. Tsapakos
John M Gemery
Fred W. Kolling
Gary N. Schwartz
Kevin Shee
Bradley A. Arrick
Heidi W. Trask
Source :
Breast Cancer Res Treat
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

PURPOSE: Circulating tumor DNA in plasma may present a minimally invasive opportunity to identify tumor-derived mutations to inform selection of targeted therapies for individual patients, particularly in cases of oligometastatic disease where biopsy of multiple tumors is impractical. To assess the utility of plasma DNA as a “liquid biopsy” for precision oncology, we tested whether sequencing of plasma DNA is a reliable surrogate for sequencing of tumor DNA to identify targetable genetic alterations. METHODS: Blood and biopsies of 1–3 tumors were obtained from 4 evaluable patients with advanced breast cancer. One patient provided samples from an additional 7 tumors post-mortem. DNA extracted from plasma, tumor tissues, and buffy coat of blood were used for probe-directed capture of all exons in 149 cancer-related genes and massively parallel sequencing. Somatic mutations in DNA from plasma and tumors were identified by comparison to buffy coat DNA. RESULTS: Sequencing of plasma DNA identified 27.94 +/− 11.81% (mean +/− SD) of mutations detected in a tumor(s) from the same patient; such mutations tended to be present at high allelic frequency. The majority of mutations found in plasma DNA were not found in tumor samples. Mutations were also found in plasma that matched clinically undetectable tumors found post-mortem. CONCLUSIONS: The incomplete overlap of genetic alteration profiles of plasma and tumors warrants caution in the sole reliance of plasma DNA to identify therapeutically targetable alterations in patients, and indicates that analysis of plasma DNA complements, but does not replace, tumor DNA profiling. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Subjects were prospectively enrolled in trial NCT01836640 (registered April 22, 2013).

Details

ISSN :
15737217 and 01676806
Volume :
182
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8f9aa3ab1ecbb3139fafcc32fb8255e4