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Detection of Circulating Tumor DNA in Early- and Late-Stage Human Malignancies

Authors :
Jian Wu
Clarence Lee
Silvio Veronese
Mark Sausen
Dung T. Le
Louise Olsson
Ralph H. Hruban
Gregory J. Riggins
Alessandro Olivi
Calogero Lauricella
Yuchen Jiao
Hartmut Juhl
Nickolas Papadopoulos
Evan J. Lipson
Victor E. Velculescu
Chetan Bettegowda
Hao Wang
Alberto Bardelli
Kerstin Schmidt
Matthias Holdhoff
Rebecca J. Leary
Nishant Agrawal
Isaac Kinde
Dan Theodorescu
Sueli Mieko Oba-Shinjo
Michael Goggins
Peter J. Allen
Michael Lim
Michael A. Choti
Timothy T. Harkins
Michael D. Hogarty
Seung-Mo Hong
Brandon Luber
Kenneth W. Kinzler
Christopher L. Wolfgang
Rhoda M. Alani
Peter Gibbs
Dongmei Xing
Nilofer S. Azad
Bjarne Bartlett
George J. Netto
Suely Kazue Nagahashi Marie
Giulia Siravegna
Gary L. Gallia
John L. Cameron
C. Max Schmidt
Bert Vogelstein
Yuxuan Wang
Luis A. Diaz
Leslie A. Fecher
Jenny J. Kim
Laura D. Wood
Jeanne Tie
Robert L. Giuntoli
Andrea Sartore-Bianchi
Jon D. Weingart
le-Ming Shih
Emmanuel S. Antonarakis
Salvatore Siena
Daniel A. Laheru
Kelly S. Oliner
Tian Li Wang
Henry Brem
Source :
ResearcherID

Abstract

The development of noninvasive methods to detect and monitor tumors continues to be a major challenge in oncology. We used digital polymerase chain reaction–based technologies to evaluate the ability of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) to detect tumors in 640 patients with various cancer types. We found that ctDNA was detectable in >75% of patients with advanced pancreatic, ovarian, colorectal, bladder, gastroesophageal, breast, melanoma, hepatocellular, and head and neck cancers, but in less than 50% of primary brain, renal, prostate, or thyroid cancers. In patients with localized tumors, ctDNA was detected in 73, 57, 48, and 50% of patients with colorectal cancer, gastroesophageal cancer, pancreatic cancer, and breast adenocarcinoma, respectively. ctDNA was often present in patients without detectable circulating tumor cells, suggesting that these two biomarkers are distinct entities. In a separate panel of 206 patients with metastatic colorectal cancers, we showed that the sensitivity of ctDNA for detection of clinically relevant KRAS gene mutations was 87.2% and its specificity was 99.2%. Finally, we assessed whether ctDNA could provide clues into the mechanisms underlying resistance to epidermal growth factor receptor blockade in 24 patients who objectively responded to therapy but subsequently relapsed. Twenty-three (96%) of these patients developed one or more mutations in genes involved in the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. Together, these data suggest that ctDNA is a broadly applicable, sensitive, and specific biomarker that can be used for a variety of clinical and research purposes in patients with multiple different types of cancer.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ResearcherID
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....90234d97cfda896c19583f2564cd2ce8