Abstract

Analysis of cell-free tumour DNA, a liquid biopsy, is a promising biomarker for cancer. We have performed a proof-of principle study to test the applicability in the clinical setting, analysing copy number alterations (CNAs) in plasma and tumour tissue from 44 patients with gastro-oesophageal cancer. DNA was isolated from blood plasma and a tissue sample from each patient. Array-CGH was applied to the tissue DNA. The cell-free plasma DNA was sequenced by low-coverage whole-genome sequencing using a clinical pipeline for non-invasive prenatal testing. WISECONDOR and ichorCNA, two bioinformatic tools, were used to process the output data and were compared to each other. Cancer-associated CNAs could be seen in 59% (26/44) of the tissue biopsies. In the plasma samples, a targeted approach analysing 61 regions of special interest in gastro-oesophageal cancer detected cancer-associated CNAs with a z-score >5 in 11 patients. Broadening the analysis to a whole-genome view, 17/44 patients (39%) had cancer-associated CNAs using WISECONDOR and 13 (30%) using ichorCNA. Of the 26 patients with tissue-verified cancer-associated CNAs, 14 (54%) had corresponding CNAs in plasma. Potentially clinically actionable amplifications overlapping the genes VEGFA, EGFR and FGFR2 were detected in the plasma from three patients. We conclude that low-coverage whole-genome sequencing without prior knowledge of the tumour alterations could become a useful tool for cell-free tumour DNA analysis of total CNAs in plasma from patients with gastro-oesophageal cancer.

Highlights

  • The stomach and the oesophagus are the fifth and seventh most common cancer locations worldwide but cancers in these organs are the third and sixth most common causes of cancer death

  • We have performed a proof-of principle study to test the applicability in the clinical setting, analysing copy number alterations (CNAs) in plasma and tumour tissue from 44 patients with gastro-oesophageal cancer

  • Cancer-associated CNAs could be seen in 59% (26/44) of the tissue biopsies

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Summary

Introduction

The stomach and the oesophagus are the fifth and seventh most common cancer locations worldwide but cancers in these organs are the third and sixth most common causes of cancer death. Symptoms of gastro-oesophageal cancer are often diffuse and develop slowly why the diagnosis frequently is set at a late stage [1]. Other classifications have been suggested [4, 5] In the oesophagus, both squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma can occur. Oesophageal adenocarcinoma share many clinical and epidemiological characteristics with gastric adenocarcinoma [3] and there is similarity between the genetic aberrations in squamous cell cancer and adenocarcinoma in the oesophagus [6]. Analysis of cell-free tumour DNA, a liquid biopsy, is a promising biomarker for cancer. We have performed a proof-of principle study to test the applicability in the clinical setting, analysing copy number alterations (CNAs) in plasma and tumour tissue from 44 patients with gastro-oesophageal cancer

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