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Comparison of two targeted ultra-deep sequencing technologies for analysis of plasma circulating tumour DNA in endocrine-therapy-resistant breast cancer patients

Authors :
Jacqueline A Shaw
Justin Stebbing
Robert K. Hastings
Karen Howarth
David S. Guttery
Emma Green
Daniel Fernadez-Garcia
Kelly L. T. Gleason
Luke Martinson
Allison Hills
Nitzan Rosenfeld
Charlotte Ion
Laura M. Kenny
Farah Rehman
R. Charles Coombes
Amelia J Rushton
Karen Page
Andrijac Sanela
Susan Cleator
Georgios Nteliopoulos
Warren Emmett
National Institute for Health Research
Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust- BRC Funding
Source :
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

PurposeThere is growing interest in the application of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) as a sensitive tool for monitoring tumour evolution and guiding targeted therapy in patients with cancer. However, robust comparisons of different platform technologies are still required. Here we compared the InVisionSeq™ ctDNA Assay with the Oncomine™ Breast cfDNA Assay to assess their concordance and feasibility for the detection of mutations in plasma at low (MethodsNinety-six plasma samples from 50 patients with estrogen receptor (ER)-positive metastatic breast cancer (mBC) were profiled using the InVision Assay. Results were compared to the Oncomine assay in 30 samples from 26 patients, where there was sufficient material and variants were covered by both assays. Longitudinal samples were analysed for 8 patients with endocrine resistance.ResultsWe detected alterations in 59/96 samples from 34/50 patients analysed with the InVision assay, most frequently affectingESR1, PIK3CAandTP53. Complete or partial concordance was found in 28/30 samples analysed by both assays, and VAF values were highly correlated. Excellent concordance was found for most genes, and most discordant calls occurred at VAF ESR1andPIK3CA.ConclusionThis study shows that both ultra-deep next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies can detect genomic alternations even at low VAFs in plasma samples of mBC patients. The strong agreement of the technologies indicates sufficient reproducibility for clinical use as prognosic and predictive biomarker.

Details

ISSN :
15737217
Volume :
188
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Breast cancer research and treatment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7ece209ee5fb7adca7ce787e31243bef