Table 1.
Reference | Number of Patients Included (n) | Tumor Type and Indication | Methodology | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Early detection of metastatic relapse and monitoring of therapeutic efficacy by ultra-deep sequencing of plasma cell-free DNA in patientswith urothelial bladder carcinoma [91] | 68 | Muscle invasive bladder cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy before cystectomy | Tumor sequencing: WES Plasma sequencing: 16 mutations/patient by multiplex PCR. |
A total of 76% of ctDNA-positive patients post cystectomy had recurrence (median 96 days before). A total of 0% of ctDNA-negative had recurrence. |
Mutation tracking in circulating tumor DNA predicts relapse in early breast cancer [86] | 55 | Early breast cancer patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy | Tumor sequencing: NGS on panel with 14 known breast cancer driver genes (26). Plasma sequencing: 1 (or more) mutation(s) was (were) followed using ddPCR. |
ctDNA was detected in the single post-operative blood test in 19% (7 of 37) of patients. ctDNA detection was predictive of early relapse (median 6.5 months). |
Personalized circulating tumor DNA analysis to detect residual disease after neoadjuvant therapy in breast cancer [89] | 33 | Stage I to Stage III breast cancer | Tumor sequencing: WES Plasma sequencing: Using TARDIS (combinaison of NGS + PCR + UMIs): 6 to 115 mutations per patient. |
Before treatment, ctDNA detected in 32 of 32 patients at tumor fractions of 0.002% to 1.06%. Plasma samples after completion of NAT were analyzed in 22 patients. ctDNA+ in 17 out of 22 patients, including 12 out of 13 patients with invasive or in situ residual disease and 5 out of 9 patients with pathological CR. In patients who achieved pathological CR, the median decrease in ctDNA was 96%, whereas in patients with residual disease observed at surgery, the median decrease was 77%. |
Targeted next-generation sequencing of circulating-tumor DNA for tracking minimal residual disease in localized colon cancer [92] | 94 | Resectable colon cancers with plasma available | Tumor sequencing: NGS on custom targeted panel of 29 genes. Plasma sequencing: personalized ddPCR assays for each somatic mutation identified in the tissue. |
ctDNA was detected in 63.8% at baseline. ctDNA was detected at 6–8 weeks post-surgery, before starting adjuvant chemotherapy, in 20.3% (14 of 69) patients with plasma available at this time. In ctDNA-positive post-op: 57.1% (8 of 14 patients) experienced reccurence. The presence of ctDNA immediately after surgery was associated with poorer DFS. |
Circulating tumor DNA analyses as markers of recurrence risk and benefit of adjuvant therapy for Stage III colon cancer [90] | 96 | Stage III colon cancer | Tumor sequencing: NGS on 15 genes recurrently mutated in colorectal cancer. Plasma sequencing: 1 mutation/patient with Safe-Seq (NGS + UMIs). |
A tumor-specific mutation was detected (ctDNA-positive finding) in the post-surgical plasma sample of 20 of 96 patients (21%). ctDNA was detectable in 15 of 88 (17%) post-chemotherapy samples. Post-surgical ctDNA was detectable in 10 of 24 patients (42%) with recurrence. |
Circulating tumor DNA in neoadjuvant-treated breast cancer reflects response andsurvival [88] | 84 | High-risk earlybreast cancer patients with NAT (I-SPY2 Trial) | Tumor sequencing: WES Plasma sequencing: 16 mutations/patient by multiplex PCR |
After NAC, all patients who achieved pCR were ctDNA-negative (n = 17, 100%). For those who did not achieve pCR (n = 43), ctDNA-positive patients (14%) had significantly increased risk of metastatic recurrence (HR 10.4; 95% CI, 2.3–46.6). Patients who did not achieve pCR but were ctDNA negative (86%) had a similar outcome to those who achieved pCR. |
Circulating Tumor DNA predicts pathologic and clinical outcomes following neoadjuvantchemoradiation and surgery for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer [93] | 29 | Locally advanced rectal cancer | Tumor sequencing: WES Plasma sequencing: personalized ddPCR assays for each somatic mutation identified in the tissue. |
Patients with detectable postoperative ctDNA experienced poorer RFS (hazard ratio, 11.56; p = 0.007). All patients (4 out of 4) with detectable postoperative ctDNA recurred (positive predictive value = 100%), whereas only 2 out of 15 patients with undetectable ctDNA recurred (negative predictive value = 87%). |
Galaxy Study: Preoperative ctDNA levels are detectable in the majority of patients with resectable colorectal cancer [94] | 808 | Resectable CRC | Tumor sequencing: WES Plasma sequencing: personalized ddPCR assays for each somatic mutation identified in the tissue. |
Longitudinal ctDNA positivity at postoperative weeks 4, 12, and 24 was significantly associated with inferior disease-free survival (DFS) with a hazard ratio (HR) of 46.8. Sensitivity of relapse detection was 93.1%. Positivity at postoperative week 4 was significantly associated with inferior DFS with HR 19.5 overall, and HR 24.4 in pathologic Stage I–III, indicating it is a suitable time point for ctDNA-based adjuvant study. |
Dynamics of cell-free tumour DNA correlate with treatment response of head and neck cancer patients receiving radiochemotherapy [87] | 20 | Non-resecable locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | Tumor sequencing: NGS with 327 genes panel. Plasma sequencing: 127 driver mutations + E7 NGS panel |
Baseline: ctDNA-positive: 17/20 patients Post RCT ctDNA-positive-: 2/16 patients Eight patients relapsed: 2ctDNA-positive Eight patients without relapse: 8ctDNA-negative PPV 100%, Sn 25% |
WES: whole exome sequencing; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; ddPCR: droplet digital polymerase chain reaction; NGS: next generation sequencing, UMI: unique molecular identifier; NAT: neoadjuvant treatment; CR: complete response; NAC: neoadjuvant chemotherapy; pCR: pathological complete response; DFS: disease-free survival; RFS: relapse-free survival; HR: hazard ratio; RCT: radio-chemotherapy; PPV: positive predictive value; Sn: sensitivity; ctDNA: circulating tumor DNA.