| Literature DB >> 32312295 |
Matteo Allegretti1, Giuliano Cottone2, Fabio Carboni3, Ettore Cotroneo2, Beatrice Casini4, Elena Giordani1, Carla Azzurra Amoreo4, Simonetta Buglioni4, Maria Diodoro4, Edoardo Pescarmona4, Settimio Zazza3, Orietta Federici3, Massimo Zeuli5, Laura Conti6, Giovanni Cigliana6, Francesco Fiorentino2, Mario Valle3, Patrizio Giacomini7, Francesca Spinella8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Liquid biopsy (LB) in early-stage, non-metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) must be sensitive enough to detect extremely low circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) levels. This challenge has been seldom and non-systematically investigated.Entities:
Keywords: Circulating tumor DNA; Colorectal carcinoma; Digital PCR; Liquid biopsy; Next generation sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32312295 PMCID: PMC7168847 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-020-01569-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Study flowchart. Tissue and blood samples from CRC patients bearing primary tumors were collected on the day of surgery, and processed to obtain tDNAs and ctDNA, respectively. Lab staff was double-blinded, and all tDNAs were analyzed by two different NGS platforms, e.g. the ThermoFisher Ion Torrent S5 with the ACS targeted NGS panel (a), and the Illumina MySeq with the TST targeted NGS panel (b). Gene panels and their overlap are shown (right). Selected mutations were then validated by the QuantStudio 3D dPCR system (c). Sequencing was by NextSeq also in the case of ctDNAs (d); validation of selected mutations was by dPCR (e)
Fig. 2dPCR analysis of ctDNAs at surgery and from patients bearing metastatic CRC. ctDNAs/tDNA pairs from representative patients (at surgery and metastatic, upper and lower panels, respectively) were assessed by dPCR. Different input DNAs were used in different rows: NTC, no template control; cfDNA, circulating free DNA from healthy donors; ctDNAs and tDNAs, paired tumor and plasma samples from any given patient. Group A patients are arranged top to bottom in order of increasing pathological staging and grading. Yellow, red, blue and green dots depict not amplified, WT, MUT and double-positive dPCR spots, respectively. Red, blue and green dots altogether: cfDNA. Blue and green dots: ctDNA. ctDNA copies per mL are noted
Summary of somatic alterations (SNVs) detected in tDNA and ctDNA
| SNVs | (a) shared between tissue and blood | (b) blood only | (a) + (b) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| type (a) SNVs | patients with type (a) circulating SNVs | type (b) SNVs | patients with types (a) and (b) circulating SNVs | |
| NGS (TST) | 12/44 (27.2%) | 9/34 (26.5%) | 12 | 15/34 (44.1%) |
| dPCR | 17/34 (50.0%) | 14/34 (41.2%) | 1 | 15/34 (44.1%) |
| NGS + dPCR | 17/34 (50.0%) | 14/34 (41.2%) | 12 | 20/34 (58.8%) |
Fig. 3Correlation statistics. a Tissue DNAs were tested by NGS (ACS and TST panels) and dPCR. VAF values were calculated within the 9-gene NGS panel overlap, and then paired two by two in the three regression plots, as indicated. Additional plots were generated by pairing VAF values from (b) ctDNAs (NGS vs dPCR), and (c) tDNA/ctDNA (dPCR vs dPCR) from individual patients. ctDNA levels assessed by dPCR were correlated with (d) pathological tumor staging and (e) tumor size (major diameter). In (e), the best fit is defined by a polynomial curve, and the area in the low copy number range is expanded to enhance resolution of low tumor sizes. Regression coefficients and significance (Student’s T-test) are shown. Abbreviations: ns, non-significant
Fig. 4Comparison between conventional serum biomarkers and circulating DNA. a Regression analysis of ctDNA dPCR values on the day of surgery paired with serum CEA and Ca19.9 levels assessed in the 15 days prior to surgery. All values are in logarithmic scale. Regression coefficients and p values are shown. ns: nonsignificant. Red dotted lines: CEA and Ca19.9 positivity threshold (4.7 ng/ml and 34 U/ml, respectively). Samples with undetectable ctDNAs are aligned to the Y axis. b A scoring matrix was built to match dPCR positives (any value) and negatives (undetectable) on the one hand vs CEA and Ca19.9 positives and negatives on the other
Fig. 5Liquid biopsy during clinical follow-up. a Representative results of ctDNA levels at surgery and 3 months after surgery (t1). b Three examples of ctDNA responses to chemotherapy, apparently complete. Progressive disappearance of ctDNA may be appreciated in boxed areas. Abbreviations: NTC, no template control