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Personalized circulating tumor DNA analysis to detect residual disease after neoadjuvant therapy in breast cancer

Authors :
Patricia A. Cronin
Suet-Feung Chin
Bradon R. McDonald
Heidi E. Kosiorek
Stephen John Sammut
Donald W. Northfelt
Barbara A. Pockaj
Karen S. Anderson
Muhammed Murtaza
Maria Farooq
Thomas P. Slavin
Carlos Caldas
Ahuva Odenheimer-Bergman
Tania Contente-Cuomo
Ann E. McCullough
Nieves Perdigones
Jeffrey N. Weitzel
Rosa Mejia
Brenda Ernst
Bhavika K. Patel
Source :
Science Translational Medicine. 11
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2019.

Abstract

Longitudinal analysis of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) has shown promise for monitoring treatment response. However, most current methods lack adequate sensitivity for residual disease detection during or after completion of treatment in patients with nonmetastatic cancer. To address this gap and to improve sensitivity for minute quantities of residual tumor DNA in plasma, we have developed targeted digital sequencing (TARDIS) for multiplexed analysis of patient-specific cancer mutations. In reference samples, by simultaneously analyzing 8 to 16 known mutations, TARDIS achieved 91 and 53% sensitivity at mutant allele fractions (AFs) of 3 in 104 and 3 in 105, respectively, with 96% specificity, using input DNA equivalent to a single tube of blood. We successfully analyzed up to 115 mutations per patient in 80 plasma samples from 33 women with stage I to III breast cancer. Before treatment, TARDIS detected ctDNA in all patients with 0.11% median AF. After completion of neoadjuvant therapy, ctDNA concentrations were lower in patients who achieved pathological complete response (pathCR) compared to patients with residual disease (median AFs, 0.003 and 0.017%, respectively, P = 0.0057, AUC = 0.83). In addition, patients with pathCR showed a larger decrease in ctDNA concentrations during neoadjuvant therapy. These results demonstrate high accuracy for assessment of molecular response and residual disease during neoadjuvant therapy using ctDNA analysis. TARDIS has achieved up to 100-fold improvement beyond the current limit of ctDNA detection using clinically relevant blood volumes, demonstrating that personalized ctDNA tracking could enable individualized clinical management of patients with cancer treated with curative intent.

Details

ISSN :
19466242 and 19466234
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Translational Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ff082ef0be4e06de790339e82a930a62
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.aax7392