Back to Search Start Over

Clinical utility of next-generation sequencing-based ctDNA testing for common and novel ALK fusions

Authors :
Alex Makhnin
David R. Jones
Hai-Yan Tu
Michael F. Berger
Charles M. Rudin
Pedram Razavi
Malinda Itchins
Bob T. Li
Michael Offin
Tristan Shaffer
Jorge S. Reis-Filho
Caterina Bertucci
Ryma Benayed
Sebastian Mondaca
Nick Pavlakis
Andres Martinez
Stephen Clarke
Gregory J. Riely
Chongrui Xu
James M. Isbell
Yonina R. Murciano-Goroff
Gaetano Rocco
Emily S. Lebow
Maria E. Arcila
Daniel R. Gomez
Seyed Ali Hosseini
Mark Li
Alexander Drilon
Lee P. Lim
Andreas Rimner
Adrian Lee
Azadeh Namakydoust
Jamie E. Chaft
Ronglai Shen
Source :
Lung Cancer
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Liquid biopsy for plasma circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) next-generation sequencing (NGS) can detect ALK fusions, though data on clinical utility of this technology in the real world is limited. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients with lung cancer without known oncogenic drivers or who had acquired resistance to therapy (n = 736) underwent prospective plasma ctDNA NGS. A subset of this cohort (n = 497) also had tissue NGS. We evaluated ALK fusion detection, turnaround time (TAT), plasma and tissue concordance, matching to therapy, and treatment response. RESULTS: ctDNA identified an ALK fusion in 21 patients (3%) with a variety of breakpoints and fusion partners, including EML4, CLTC, and PON1, a novel ALK fusion partner. TAT for ctDNA NGS was shorter than tissue NGS (10 vs. 20 days; p

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lung Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d45784cdb49f479e1d9d58309b787778