Abstract

BackgroundLiquid biopsy (LB) in early-stage, non-metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) must be sensitive enough to detect extremely low circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) levels. This challenge has been seldom and non-systematically investigated.MethodsNext generation sequencing (NGS) and digital PCR (dPCR) were combined to test tumor DNAs (tDNAs) and paired ctDNAs collected at surgery from 39 patients, 12 of whom were also monitored during the immediate post-surgery follow up. Patients treated for metastatic disease (n = 14) were included as controls.ResultsNGS and dPCR concordantly (100% agreement) called at least one single nucleotide variant (SNV) in 34 tDNAs, estimated differences in allelic frequencies being negligible (±1.4%). However, despite dPCR testing, SNVs were only detectable in 15/34 (44.1%) ctDNAs from patients at surgery, as opposed to 14/14 (100%) metastatic patients. This was likely due to striking differences (average 10 times, up to 500) in ctDNA levels between groups. NGS revealed blood-only SNVs, suggesting spatial heterogeneity since pre-surgery disease stages, and raising the combined NGS/dPCR sensitivity to 58.8%. ctDNA levels at surgery correlated with neither tumor size, stage, grade, or nodal status, nor with variant abundance in paired tDNA. LB sensitivity reached 63.6% when ctDNA was combined with CEA. Finally, persistence and absence of ctDNA on the first conventional (month 3) post-surgery follow-up were associated with fast relapse and a disease-free status in 3 and 7 patients, respectively.ConclusionsA simple clinical NGS/dPCR/CEA combination effectively addresses the LB challenge in a fraction of non-metastatic CRC patients.

Highlights

  • Liquid biopsy (LB) in early-stage, non-metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) must be sensitive enough to detect extremely low circulating tumor DNA levels

  • For stringent testing, paired Tissue DNA (tDNA)/circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) samples were assessed by both targeted next generation sequencing (NGS) and digital PCR (dPCR)

  • Since 9/28 tested genes are common to the two NGS panels (Fig. 1, right), and dPCR assays are custom-designed on the basis of NGS, there is a large double to triple overlap area of data collection and technical comparison among AmpliseqTM Colon and Lung panel (ACL), tested by one NGS panel (TST) and dPCR calls

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Summary

Introduction

Liquid biopsy (LB) in early-stage, non-metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) must be sensitive enough to detect extremely low circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) levels. This challenge has been seldom and non-systematically investigated. CtDNA is instead preferred in metastatic CRC (mCRC), since it is abundant and detectable when tumor burden is high [9,10,11,12,13]. A clinical trial in 115 patients with mCRC demonstrated an excellent agreement in the RAS mutational status between tissue and plasma, strongly supporting the application of ctDNA to assign EGFR-blockade therapy [13]. CtDNA may readily become an appealing alternative/adjunct for early CRC detection and management in a wide applicative niche spanning from pre-symptomatic to advanced cancer

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