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. 2021 Apr 23;13(9):2049. doi: 10.3390/cancers13092049

Table 2.

Limitations of using next-generation sequencing (NGS) with circulating free (cf) nucleic acids extracted from blood samples at diagnosis of non-small cell lung carcinoma.

The quantity of cf-nucleic acid extracted from plasma samples may not be sufficient for NGS due to the tumor stage
Brain metastases usually shed a too low amount of tumor cf-nucleic acid into the blood for NGS
Some specific mutations in certain genes are associated with a low amount of cf-nucleic acid for NGS
Gene amplifications and rearrangements are less frequently detectable with cf-nucleic acid in blood samples as the same nucleic acid extracted from a tissue biopsy
Assessment of PD-L1 for first-line immune check point inhibitor treatment is not possible with blood samples
Pitfalls can be associated to NGS with cf-nucleic acid due to clonal hematopoiesis on circulating free germinal DNA
Validation and accreditation processes are more difficult to set up for NGS with blood samples than for NGS with a tissue biopsy