| Literature DB >> 29137355 |
Michael J Pishvaian1,2, R Joseph Bender1, Lynn M Matrisian3, Lola Rahib3, Andrew Hendifar4, William A Hoos3, Sam Mikhail5, Vincent Chung6, Vincent Picozzi7, Craig Heartwell1, Kimberly Mason1, Katelyn Varieur1, Metasebia Aberra1, Subha Madhavan1,2, Emanuel Petricoin1, Jonathan R Brody1,8.
Abstract
Recent improvements in next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology have enabled detection of biomarkers in cell-free DNA in blood and may ultimately replace invasive tissue biopsies. However, a better understanding of the performance of blood-based NGS assays is needed prior to routine clinical use. As part of an IRB-approved molecular profiling registry trial of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) patients, we facilitated blood-based NGS testing of 34 patients from multiple community-based and high-volume academic oncology practices. 23 of these patients also underwent traditional tumor tissue-based NGS testing. cfDNA was not detected in 9/34 (26%) patients. Overall concordance between blood and tumor tissue NGS assays was low, with only 25% sensitivity of blood-based NGS for tumor tissue NGS. Mutations in KRAS, the major PDA oncogene, were only detected in 10/34 (29%) blood samples, compared to 20/23 (87%) tumor tissue biopsies. The presence of mutations in circulating DNA was associated with reduced overall survival (54% in mutation-positive versus 90% in mutation-negative). Our results suggest that in the setting of previously treated, advanced PDA, liquid biopsies are not yet an adequate substitute for tissue biopsies. Further refinement in defining the optimal patient population and timing of blood sampling may improve the value of a blood-based test.Entities:
Keywords: blood-based NGS; cfDNA; pancreatic cancer
Year: 2016 PMID: 29137355 PMCID: PMC5663527 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.13225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Patient characteristics
| cfDNA-based NGS | ctcDNA-based | |
|---|---|---|
| Male | 13 | 5 |
| Female | 13 | 3 |
| Median | 66.5 | 63 |
| Range | 48 – 83 | 30 – 74 |
| Extensive | 17 | 7 |
| Localized/Minimal | 6 | 0 |
| None | 3 | 1 |
| Progressing | 10 | 5 |
| Stable | 9 | 3 |
| Responding | 7 | 0 |
| Liver | 9 | 5 |
| Pancreas | 2 | 1 |
| Lung | 2 | 1 |
| Peritoneum | 2 | 0 |
| Duodenum | 1 | 0 |
| Hospital | 19 | 8 |
| Community Practice | 7 | 0 |
Tumor biopsy sites are only listed for patients with tumor tissue NGS data. Patients with disease burden listed as “None” were those that had undergone pancreatectomy or Whipple procedures and had no evidence of recurrence.
Figure 1Panel-normalized number of alterations detected in liquid and tumor tissue biopsies
A. On average, more variants were detected in the tumor tissue biopsy (red) than the cfDNA-based assay (blue) in patients with data from both assays available. Panel normalization was performed by dividing the number of mutations detected in each patient by the number of genes on the panel (N = 321 for tumor tissue, N = 68 for cfDNA, and N = 50 for ctcDNA). B. The number of variants detected in the patients for whom only the cfDNA-based assay was performed was similar to that of the cfDNA-based assays in panel A. C. More variants were detected in the tumor tissue biopsy (red) than the ctcDNA-based assay (blue). No tumor tissue biopsy was available for the last patient listed, pan-774. D. The pancreatic cancer driver genes KRAS, TP53, SMAD4, and CDKN2A were detected less frequently in cfDNA-based biopsies. Patients are subdivided according to which biopsies were performed: patients for whom both cfDNA and tumor tissue biopsies were obtained are in the left block, while patients for whom only cfDNA biopsies were obtained are in the middle block, and patients with both ctcDNA and tumor tissue biopsies are in the right block. Patients for whom tumor quantity was insufficient for tissue-based NGS are shaded in gray. Disease burden and treatment response were determined based on the most recent CT scans prior to drawing of blood samples.
Figure 2Precision and sensitivity of cfDNA-based NGS assay in detection of tumor tissue variants
The precision (A) andsensitivity (B) were calculated for each gene listed in the middle using the formula at the bottom of the respective panel. TP indicates the number of true positives, or concordant variants; FP indicates false positives, or the number of variants in cfDNA but not present in tumor tissue; FN indicates false negatives, or the number of variants in tumor tissue but not in cfDNA.
Figure 3Detection of actionable mutations
Variants with therapeutic implications were detected in both tumor tissue and cfDNA. Patients are subdivided into those with tumor tissue and cfDNA data (left block), cfDNA only (middle block), and tumor tissue and ctcDNA (right block). Variants found in tumor tissue NGS analysis are indicated by a red square, variants found in cfDNA-based NGS analysis are indicated by a blue square, and the sole concordant variant is indicated by a half-red/half-blue square. Patients for whom tumor quantity was insufficient for tissue-based NGS are shaded in gray.
Figure 4Detection of tumor DNA in circulating DNA and prognostic significance in pancreatic cancer patients
A. The maximum mutant allele fraction in cfDNA or ctcDNA trended higher in patients with extensive disease, although this was not statistically significant. B. Overall survival trended lower in patients with detectable tumor DNA in cfDNA (ctDNA+, n = 24) than in those with no detectable tumor DNA (ctDNA-, n = 10), with a total of 11 and 1 deaths, respectively.
Comparison of concordance in published liquid biopsy studies
| Zill et al. 2015 [ | Lanman et al. 2015 [ | Bettegowda et al. 2014 [ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cancer Type | 18 PDA | 57 Colorectal | 206 Colorectal |
| Stage | 3 Stage III | 40 Stage III | 206 Stage IV |
| Tumor Biopsy Site | 11 Primary | Unspecified | Unspecified |
| Assay | cfDNA | cfDNA | cfDNA |
| Commercial Lab | Guardant Health | Guardant Health | PGDx |
| Overall Sensitivity | 92.3% | 85% | Unspecified |
| 100% | 88% | 87.2% |