| Literature DB >> 28786531 |
Tara C Gangadhar1,2, Samantha L Savitch1, Stephanie S Yee1, Wei Xu2, Alexander C Huang1,3,4, Shannon Harmon2, David B Lieberman5, Devon Soucier1, Ryan Fan1, Taylor A Black1, Jennifer J D Morrissette5, Neeraj Salathia6, Jill Waters6, Shile Zhang6, Jonathan Toung7, Paul van Hummelen6, Jian-Bing Fan6, Xiaowei Xu5, Ravi K Amaravadi1,2, Lynn M Schuchter1,2, Giorgos C Karakousis8, Wei-Ting Hwang2,9, Erica L Carpenter1,2.
Abstract
To determine the feasibility of liquid biopsy for monitoring of patients with advanced melanoma, cell-free DNA was extracted from plasma for 25 Stage III/IV patients, most (84.0%) having received previous therapy. DNA concentrations ranged from 0.6 to 390.0 ng/ml (median = 7.8 ng/ml) and were positively correlated with tumor burden as measured by imaging (Spearman rho = 0.5435, p = .0363). Using ultra-deep sequencing for a 61-gene panel, one or more mutations were detected in 12 of 25 samples (48.0%), and this proportion did not vary significantly for patients on or off therapy at the time of blood draw (52.9% and 37.5% respectively; p = .673). Sixteen mutations were detected in eight different genes, with the most frequent mutations detected in BRAF, NRAS, and KIT. Allele fractions ranged from 1.1% to 63.2% (median = 29.1%). Among patients with tissue next-generation sequencing, nine of 11 plasma mutations were also detected in matched tissue, for a concordance of 81.8%.Entities:
Keywords: cell-free circulating tumor DNA; liquid biopsy; melanoma; precision medicine
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28786531 PMCID: PMC5742050 DOI: 10.1111/pcmr.12623
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pigment Cell Melanoma Res ISSN: 1755-1471 Impact factor: 4.693