Litcius/Paper detail

Identification of germline cancer predisposition variants during clinical ctDNA testing

Leigh Anne Stout, Nawal Kassem, Cynthia Hunter, Santosh Philips, Milan Radovich, Bryan P. Schneider

2021Scientific Reports34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Next-generation sequencing of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is a non-invasive method to guide therapy selection for cancer patients. ctDNA variant allele frequency (VAF) is commonly reported and may aid in discerning whether a variant is germline or somatic. We report on the fidelity of VAF in ctDNA as a predictor for germline variant carriage. Two patient cohorts were studied. Cohort 1 included patients with known germline variants. Cohort 2 included patients with any variant detected by the ctDNA assay with VAF of 40-60%. In cohort 1, 36 of 91 (40%) known germline variants were identified through ctDNA analysis with a VAF of 39-87.6%. In cohort 2, 111 of 160 (69%) variants identified by ctDNA analysis with a VAF between 40 and 60% were found to be germline. Therefore, variants with a VAF between 40 and 60% should induce suspicion for germline status but should not be used as a replacement for germline testing.

Topics & Concepts

GermlineGermline mutationCohortCancerGeneticsOncologySomatic cellAlleleGenetic testingMedicineInternal medicineBiologyMutationGeneCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsDNA Repair MechanismsGenomics and Rare Diseases