| Literature DB >> 32294884 |
Diego Fernández-Lázaro1, Juan Luis García Hernández2,3, Alberto Caballero García4, Alfredo Córdova Martínez5, Juan Mielgo-Ayuso5, Juan Jesús Cruz-Hernández3,6.
Abstract
In recent years, there has been an increase in knowledge of cancer, accompanied by a technological development that gives rise to medical oncology. An instrument that allows the implementation of individualized therapeutic strategies is the liquid biopsy. Currently, it is the most innovative methodology in medical oncology. Its high potential as a tool for screening and early detection, the possibility of assessing the patient's condition after diagnosis and relapse, as well as the effectiveness of real-time treatments in different types of cancer. Liquid biopsy is capable of overcoming the limitations of tissue biopsies. The elements that compose the liquid biopsy are circulating tumor cells, circulating tumor nucleic acids, free of cells or contained in exosomes, microvesicle and platelets. Liquid biopsy studies are performed on various biofluids extracted in a non-invasive way, and they can be performed both from the blood and in urine, saliva or cerebrospinal fluid. The development of genotyping techniques, using the elements that make up liquid biopsy, make it possible to detect mutations, intertumoral and intratumoral heterogeneity, and provide molecular information on cancer for application in medical oncology in an individualized way in different types of tumors. Therefore, liquid biopsy has the potential to change the way medical oncology could predict the course of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: biofluids; cancer; circulating tumor cells; circulating tumor nucleic acids; exosomes; liquid biopsy; microvesicles; precision oncology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32294884 PMCID: PMC7235853 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics10040215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1Components of liquid biopsy.
Figure 2Comparison of tissue biopsy and liquid biopsy.
Applications of the elements of circulating tumor cells (CTCs), tumor nucleic acids (ctDNA/ctRNA) and exosomes. Adapted from Siravegna et al. (2018) [7].
| Elements | CTCs | ctDNA/ctRNA | Exosomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Potential to assess tumor spatial and temporal heterogeneity | No | Yes | No |
| Detection of somatic mutations, indels, alteration of the number of copies and gene fusions | Yes | Yes | Si |
| Analysis of mRNA, miRNA, IncRNA and gene variants | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Evaluation of methylation patterns | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Methylation Studies | Yes | No | Yes |
| Expression Studies | Yes | No | Si |
| Cell morphology and functional studies ex vivo | Yes | No | No |
| Signal co-location demonstration | Yes | No | No |
| Proteomic analysis | Yes | No | Yes |