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Liquid versus tissue biopsy for detecting acquired resistance and tumor heterogeneity in gastrointestinal cancers

Authors :
David P. Ryan
Viktor A. Adalsteinsson
Alicia Wong
Kahn Rhrissorrakrai
Jeffrey W. Clark
Ryan B. Corcoran
Lawrence S. Blaszkowsky
Giulia Siravegna
Isobel J Fetter
Laxmi Parida
Aparna Raj Parikh
Colin D. Weekes
Bruce J. Giantonio
Dejan Juric
Heather A. Shahzade
David T. Ting
Theodore S. Hong
Todd R. Golub
Kara Slowik
Dora Dias-Santagata
Brandon Nadres
Janet E. Murphy
Alberto Bardelli
A. John Iafrate
Mehlika Hazar-Rethinam
Chaya Levovitz
Eunice L. Kwak
Megan Hanna
Jason E. Faris
Jennifer Y. Wo
Dimitri Livitz
François Aguet
Ipsita Dey-Guha
Eric Roeland
Filippo Utro
Elizabeth E. Martin
Brian P. Danysh
Ryan D. Nipp
Emily E. Van Seventer
Jill N. Allen
Christopher J. Pinto
Ferran Fece de la Cruz
Lipika Goyal
Liudmila Elagina
Andrew X. Zhu
Ignaty Leshchiner
Gad Getz
Source :
Nature Medicine
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

During cancer therapy, tumor heterogeneity can drive the evolution of multiple tumor subclones harboring unique resistance mechanisms in an individual patient1–3. Previous case reports and small case series have suggested that liquid biopsy (specifically, cell-free DNA (cfDNA)) may better capture the heterogeneity of acquired resistance4–8. However, the effectiveness of cfDNA versus standard single-lesion tumor biopsies has not been directly compared in larger-scale prospective cohorts of patients following progression on targeted therapy. Here, in a prospective cohort of 42 patients with molecularly defined gastrointestinal cancers and acquired resistance to targeted therapy, direct comparison of postprogression cfDNA versus tumor biopsy revealed that cfDNA more frequently identified clinically relevant resistance alterations and multiple resistance mechanisms, detecting resistance alterations not found in the matched tumor biopsy in 78% of cases. Whole-exome sequencing of serial cfDNA, tumor biopsies and rapid autopsy specimens elucidated substantial geographic and evolutionary differences across lesions. Our data suggest that acquired resistance is frequently characterized by profound tumor heterogeneity, and that the emergence of multiple resistance alterations in an individual patient may represent the ‘rule’ rather than the ‘exception’. These findings have profound therapeutic implications and highlight the potential advantages of cfDNA over tissue biopsy in the setting of acquired resistance. Direct prospective comparison of circulating tumor DNA and tissue biopsy sequencing shows the superiority of liquid biopsies for capturing clinically relevant alterations mediating resistance to targeted therapies in cancer patients.

Details

ISSN :
10788956
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0f75deba7f96129ba623028c3d55f0d4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-019-0561-9