Abstract

BackgroundPrecision medicine calls for an early indicator of treatment efficiency. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is a promising marker in this setting. Our prospective study explored the association between disease development and change of ctDNA during first line chemotherapy in patients with RAS/RAF mutated metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC).MethodsThe study included 138 patients with mCRC receiving standard first line treatment. In patients with RAS/RAF mutated tumor DNA the same mutation was quantified in the plasma using droplet digital PCR. The fractional abundance of ctDNA was assessed in plasma before treatment start and at every treatment cycle until radiologically defined progressive disease.ResultsRAS/RAF mutations were detected in the plasma from 77 patients. Twenty patients progressed on treatment and 57 stopped treatment without progression. The presence of mutated DNA in plasma was correlated with poor overall survival. A low level of ctDNA after the first cycle of chemotherapy was associated with a low risk of progression. On the other hand, a significant increase of ctDNA at any time during the treatment course was associated with a high risk of progression on continuous treatment. The first increase in ctDNA level occurred at a median of 51 days before radiologically confirmed progression.ConclusionsThe results indicate that the ctDNA level holds potential as a clinically valuable marker in first line treatment of mCRC. A rapid decrease was associated with a prolonged progression free interval, whereas a significant increase gave notice of early progression with a relevant lead time.

Highlights

  • Precision medicine calls for an early indicator of treatment efficiency

  • The results indicated a clear correlation between the Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) level as divided according to the median value and progression free survival (PFS) (HR = 3.95, P = 0.017)

  • The increased level appearing before progression was found by CT scan with a median lead time of 51 days. In this prospective study of metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients receiving first line chemotherapy we observed a strong correlation between the ctDNA level and clinical endpoints

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Summary

Introduction

Precision medicine calls for an early indicator of treatment efficiency. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is a promising marker in this setting. Our prospective study explored the association between disease development and change of ctDNA during first line chemotherapy in patients with RAS/RAF mutated metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). Precision medicine is an important subject with growing clinical interest in cancer treatment. The concept may be complicated, but its core is as simple as “the right treatment to the right patient at the right time”. Accessible biomarkers validated for clinical application are warranted. Blood samples have several advantages over tissue biopsies and the “liquid biopsy” concept has seen increased interest [1]. Tumor specific mutations in tissue rank high as tumor markers of clinical relevance and are detectable by Generation Sequencing (NGS). A complete characterization takes considerable resources and the sensitivity is low, around 2% [2]

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