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ctDNA applications and integration in colorectal cancer: an NCI Colon and Rectal-Anal Task Forces whitepaper

Authors :
C. Montagut
Marc J. Gollub
Rachel Anne Goodwin
Patrick McKay Boland
Thomas J. George
Chloe E. Atreya
Theodore S. Hong
Alan P. Venook
Federico Innocenti
Aaron Scott
Al B. Benson
Greg Yothers
Howard S. Hochster
Heinz-Josef Lenz
Carmen J. Allegra
Christopher H. Lieu
Dustin A. Deming
Ki Y. Chung
Arvind Dasari
Stanley R. Hamilton
Fang-Shu Ou
Mehmet Sitki Copur
Atif Iqbal
Jason A. Zell
Andrea Dwyer
Jaclyn F. Hechtman
Ryan B. Corcoran
Maximilian Diehn
Scott Kopetz
Rona Yaeger
Samuel A. Jacobs
Kanwal Pratap Singh Raghav
Laura S. Porter
Hagen F. Kennecke
Cathy Eng
Qian Shi
Van K. Morris
Bruno C. Odisio
Y. Nancy You
Deborah Schrag
James J. Lee
John H. Strickler
O. Wolf Lindwasser
Source :
Nature Reviews. Clinical Oncology, Nature reviews. Clinical oncology, vol 17, iss 12
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

An increasing number of studies are describing potential uses of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) in the care of patients with colorectal cancer. Owing to this rapidly developing area of research, the Colon and Rectal–Anal Task Forces of the United States National Cancer Institute convened a panel of multidisciplinary experts to summarize current data on the utility of ctDNA in the management of colorectal cancer and to provide guidance in promoting the efficient development and integration of this technology into clinical care. The panel focused on four key areas in which ctDNA has the potential to change clinical practice, including the detection of minimal residual disease, the management of patients with rectal cancer, monitoring responses to therapy, and tracking clonal dynamics in response to targeted therapies and other systemic treatments. The panel also provides general guidelines with relevance for ctDNA-related research efforts, irrespective of indication.<br />The analysis of ctDNA obtained from low-volume blood samples has the potential to transform the management of patients with colorectal cancer. Nevertheless, research priorities and minimum standards for sample collection and analysis in this area are currently missing. In this Position Paper, the NCI Colon and Rectal–Anal Task Forces provide a set of recommendations designed to address these challenges and accelerate the implementation of ctDNA in the management of patients with colorectal cancer.

Details

ISSN :
17594782
Volume :
17
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature reviews. Clinical oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1f92cbf2ed9dd28ea9e4cf8b0a070e16