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Sensitive detection of minimal residual disease in patients treated for early-stage breast cancer

Authors :
Viktor A. Adalsteinsson
Melissa E. Hughes
Ann H. Partridge
Justin Rhoades
J. Christopher Love
Ofir Cohen
Daniel G. Stover
Gad Getz
Kathy D. Miller
Mariana Fitarelli-Kiehl
Nan Lin
Pedro Exman
Heather A. Parsons
Ka Wai Leong
Erica L. Mayer
Sarah C. Reed
Eric P. Winer
Fangyan Yu
Donna Neuberg
G. Mike Makrigiorgos
Christopher Lo
Matthew Meyerson
Tianyu Li
Ian E. Krop
Lorenzo Trippa
Matthew Defelice
Denisse Rotem
Atish D. Choudhury
Mark Fleharty
Gregory Gydush
Gregory J. Kirkner
Shoshana M. Rosenberg
Nikhil Wagle
Samuel S. Freeman
Gavin Ha
Brendan Blumenstiel
Priyanka Ram
Carrie Cibulskis
Niall J. Lennon
Laura C. Collins
Todd R. Golub
Kan Xiong
Source :
Clin Cancer Res, PMC
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Purpose:Existing cell-free DNA (cfDNA) methods lack the sensitivity needed for detecting minimal residual disease (MRD) following therapy. We developed a test for tracking hundreds of patient-specific mutations to detect MRD with a 1,000-fold lower error rate than conventional sequencing.Experimental Design:We compared the sensitivity of our approach to digital droplet PCR (ddPCR) in a dilution series, then retrospectively identified two cohorts of patients who had undergone prospective plasma sampling and clinical data collection: 16 patients with ER+/HER2− metastatic breast cancer (MBC) sampled within 6 months following metastatic diagnosis and 142 patients with stage 0 to III breast cancer who received curative-intent treatment with most sampled at surgery and 1 year postoperative. We performed whole-exome sequencing of tumors and designed individualized MRD tests, which we applied to serial cfDNA samples.Results:Our approach was 100-fold more sensitive than ddPCR when tracking 488 mutations, but most patients had fewer identifiable tumor mutations to track in cfDNA (median = 57; range = 2–346). Clinical sensitivity was 81% (n = 13/16) in newly diagnosed MBC, 23% (n = 7/30) at postoperative and 19% (n = 6/32) at 1 year in early-stage disease, and highest in patients with the most tumor mutations available to track. MRD detection at 1 year was strongly associated with distant recurrence [HR = 20.8; 95% confidence interval, 7.3–58.9]. Median lead time from first positive sample to recurrence was 18.9 months (range = 3.4–39.2 months).Conclusions:Tracking large numbers of individualized tumor mutations in cfDNA can improve MRD detection, but its sensitivity is driven by the number of tumor mutations available to track.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clin Cancer Res, PMC
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c2318a87a074383f9e262de4c851f066