| Literature DB >> 27934896 |
Kikuya Kato1, Junji Uchida2, Yoji Kukita1, Toru Kumagai2, Kazumi Nishino2, Takako Inoue2, Madoka Kimura2, Fumio Imamura2.
Abstract
The limitation of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is its inability to detect cancer cell subpopulations with few or no dying cells. Lung cancer patients subjected to the EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor (EGFR-TKI) treatment were prospectively collected, and ctDNA levels represented by the activating and T790M mutations were measured. The first data set (21 patients) consisting of samples collected in the period from before initiation of EGFR-TKI to at least 2 weeks after initiation: the ctDNA dynamics generally exhibited a rapid decrease and/or a transient increase. In 4 patients, we detected a transient increase of ctDNA bearing activating mutations not identified in biopsy samples. ctDNA with the same genotypical pattern was identified in 7 out of the 39 patients of the second data set intended to include samples until the onset of disease progression. In 6 of the 7 patients, this unique ctDNA appeared in the early period after treatment initiation, and did not reappear even after disease progression or chemotherapy. In another patient, similar ctDNA appeared upon radiation therapy. The identification of ctDNA with a unique genotype indicates the presence of cancer cell subpopulations that normally contain few or no dying cells, but generate dead cells because of the treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27934896 PMCID: PMC5146655 DOI: 10.1038/srep38639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1ctDNA dynamics in the early period of EGFR-TKI treatment.
The vertical axis displays the PM score for EGFR mutations (left) or the concentration (μg/mL) of the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) (right). The horizontal axis displays the number of days after the initiation of the EGFR-TKI treatment. Blue lines indicate ctDNA with activating mutations identified in biopsy samples (exon 19 deletion or L858R). Wine red lines represent activating mutations absent from biopsy samples. Black broken lines represent CEA values. PM scores that did not exceed LOD, and CEA scores lying within the normal range are not displayed in the graphs. (a) Patient E1; (b) Patient E2; (c) Patient E3; (d) Patient E4; (e) Patient E5; (f) Patient E6; (g) Patient E7; (h) Patient E8. Clinical information on patients E1-E4, (age, sex, stage, EGFR-TKI, initial response, mutations in biopsy samples) are as follows: E1 (81, F, IV, erlotinib, PR, L858R); E2 (54, F, IV, gefitinib, PR, L858R); E3 (69, M, IV, gefitinib, PR, exon 19 deletion); E4 (56, F, IIA, gefitinib, NE, exon 19 deletion). Information on patients E5-E8 is presented in Table 1.
ctDNA with an activating mutation that was not present in biopsy samples.
| Patient ID | Age | Sex | Stage | EGFR-TKI | Initial response | Mutation in biopsy samples | Mutation of T-type ctDNA | Time point of T-type ctDNA | Time point of objective disease progression | Time point of last sample | Therapies after disease progression |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| E5 | 65 | F | IV | Gefitinib | PR | Exon 19 deletion | L858R | 2 | — | 19 | NA |
| E6 | 67 | M | IV | Gefitinib | PR | L858R | Exon 19 deletion | 12 19 | — | 131 | NA |
| E7 | 76 | F | IV | Gefitinib | SD | L858R | Exon 19 deletion | 6 | — | 222 | NA |
| E8 | 68 | F | IIIB | Erlotinib | SD | Exon 19 deletion | L858R | 7 | — | 70 | NA |
| 1 | 77 | F | IIIA | Erlotinib | PR | L858R | Exon 19 deletion | 28 | 659 | 1115 | Erlotinib (continuation) |
| 2 | 39 | F | IV | Gefitinib | PR | Exon 19 deletion | L858R | 14 | 372 | 436 | Erlotinib |
| 3 | 80 | M | IV | Gefitinib | PR | L858R | Exon 19 deletion | 347 | 296 | 440 | CBDCA |
| 5 | 69 | F | IV | Gefitinib | PR | L858R | Exon 19 deletion | 14 | 383 | 475 | CDDP+PEM |
| 13 | 66 | F | IIIA | Gefitinib | NE | L858R | Exon 19 deletion | 28 | 217 | 283 | Erlotinib |
| 15 | 56 | F | IIIB | Gefitinib | PR | L861Q | Exon 19 deletion | 34 | 335 | 761 | CDDP+PEM |
| K192 | 73 | F | IV | Gefitinib | PR | L858R | Exon 19 deletion | 30 | — | 747 | NA |
E5 - E8, the first data set; 1 - K192, the second data set; *, days after EGFR-TKI initiation. Patient IDs of the second data set are those used in a previous publication23 except K192. Abbreviations are as follows: PR, partial response; SD, stable disease; NE not evaluable; NA, not applied; CBDCA, carboplatin; CDDP, cisplatin; PEM, pemetrexed.
Figure 2ctDNA dynamics of patients during long observation periods.
(a) Patient 5; (b) Patient 10; Black arrowheads indicate the onset of objective disease progression. The white arrowhead indicates transient increase described in the main text. Red lines indicate ctDNA with T790M. The gray arrow indicates radiotherapy. Horizontal lines at the top of each panel indicate treatment, vertical bars indicate initiation of therapy, and arrowheads indicate termination of therapy. Other details are the same as those of Fig. 1. GEM, gemcitabine.
Figure 3Schematic representation of conventional and T-type ctDNAs in the EGFR-TKI treatment.
Yellow cells represent living cancer cells, whereas red cells represent dead cancer cells that release ctDNA. The abundance of conventional ctDNA increase as cancer grows; however, it decreases to undetectable levels upon initiation of the EGFR-TKI treatment, increases again upon disease progression owing to acquiring resistance. In contrast, T-type ctDNA appears upon initiation of EGFR-TKI, then disappears, and does not reappear during the observation period. The absence of reemergence may be due to a complete elimination of this subpopulation by EGFR-TKI treatment, or the subpopulation may persist without producing detectable ctDNA amounts.