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Liquid Biopsy of Non-Plasma Body Fluids in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: Look Closer to the Tumor!

Lucile Durin, Anne Pradines, Céline Basset, Bryan C. Ulrich, Laura Keller, Vincent Dongay, Gilles Favre, Julien Mazières, Nicolas Guibert

2020Cells30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Liquid biopsy is a rapidly emerging field due to an increasing number of oncogenic drivers and a better understanding of resistance mechanisms to targeted therapies in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The sensitivity of the most widely used blood-based assays is, however, limited in particular in cases of low tumor volume where shed of tumor-derived material can be limited. A negative result thus requires biopsy confirmation using minimally invasive sampling procedures that can result in small specimens, which are often not suitable for genotyping. Liquid biopsy is not limited to plasma, and tumor DNA circulating in other body fluids such as urine, pleural fluid, cerebrospinal fluid, or cytology specimen-derived supernatant can be exploited. In comparison to cell blocks, these fluids in close contact to the tumor may contain a more abundant and less analytically demanding tumor DNA. In this review, we discuss the potential applications of circulating tumor DNA derived from cytology samples in NSCLC, from early stage (screening, nodule characterization) to metastatic disease.

Topics & Concepts

Liquid biopsyCirculating tumor cellPathologyLung cancerBiopsyBody fluidCell-free fetal DNAMedicinePrimary tumorCytologyCancerLungBiologyMetastasisInternal medicineFetusPrenatal diagnosisPregnancyGeneticsCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsLung Cancer Treatments and MutationsMedical Imaging and Pathology Studies
Liquid Biopsy of Non-Plasma Body Fluids in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: Look Closer to the Tumor! | Litcius