Litcius/Paper detail

Clinical Validity of Circulating Tumor DNA as Prognostic and Predictive Marker for Personalized Colorectal Cancer Patient Management

Ariane Hallermayr, Verena Steinke‐Lange, H. Vogelsang, Markus Rentsch, Maike de Wit, C. Haberl, Elke Holinski‐Feder, Julia M. A. Pickl

2022Cancers14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is a promising liquid biopsy (LB) marker to support clinical decisions in precision medicine. For implementation into routine clinical practice, clinicians need precise ctDNA level cutoffs for reporting residual disease and monitoring tumor burden changes during therapy. We clinically validated the limit of blank (LOB) and the limit of quantification (LOQ) of assays for the clinically most relevant somatic variants BRAF p.V600E and KRAS p.G12/p.G13 in colorectal cancer (CRC) in a study cohort encompassing a total of 212 plasma samples. We prove that residual disease detection using the LOB as a clinically verified cutoff for ctDNA positivity is in concordance with clinical evidence of metastasis or recurrence. We further show that tumor burden changes during chemotherapy and the course of disease are correctly predicted using the LOQ as a cutoff for quantitative ctDNA changes. The high potential of LB using ctDNA for accurately predicting the course of disease was proven by direct comparison to the routinely used carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) as well as the circulating free DNA (cfDNA) concentration. Our results show that LB using validated ctDNA assays outperforms CEA and cfDNA for residual disease detection and the prediction of tumor burden changes.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineConcordanceLiquid biopsyCarcinoembryonic antigenKRASColorectal cancerCirculating tumor DNAOncologyInternal medicineMinimal residual diseaseDiseaseClinical PracticeCancerFamily medicineLeukemiaCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsGenetic factors in colorectal cancerRenal cell carcinoma treatment