| Literature DB >> 33139621 |
Georgia Ι Grigoriadou1, Stepan M Esagian2, Han Suk Ryu3, Ilias P Nikas4.
Abstract
Malignant pleural effusions (MPEs) often develop in advanced cancer patients and confer significant morbidity and mortality. In this review, we evaluated whether molecular profiling of MPEs with next generation sequencing (NGS) could have a role in cancer management, focusing on lung cancer. We reviewed and compared the diagnostic performance of pleural fluid liquid biopsy with other types of samples. When applied in MPEs, NGS may have comparable performance with corresponding tissue biopsies, yield higher DNA amount, and detect more genetic aberrations than blood-derived liquid biopsies. NGS in MPEs may also be preferable to plasma liquid biopsy in advanced cancer patients with a MPE and a paucicellular or it could be difficult to obtain tissue/fine-needle aspiration biopsy. Of interest, post-centrifuge supernatant NGS may exhibit superior results compared to cell pellet, cell block or other materials. NGS in MPEs can also guide clinicians in tailoring established therapies and identifying therapy resistance. Evidence is still premature regarding the role of NGS in MPEs from patients with cancers other than lung. We concluded that MPE processing could provide useful prognostic and theranostic information, besides its diagnostic role.Entities:
Keywords: EGFR; NSCLC; biomarkers; cytology; liquid biopsy; non-small cell lung carcinoma; pleural fluid; precision oncology; supernatant; therapy resistance
Year: 2020 PMID: 33139621 PMCID: PMC7712846 DOI: 10.3390/jpm10040206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
NGS analysis of NSCLC pleural fluid liquid biopsy samples compared with tissue biopsies and FNA, plasma, CSF, and BAL samples.
| First Author/Reference | Pleural Fluid Material | Summary of Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Zhang et al. [ | Cell blocks |
Pleural fluid cell blocks had similar DNA quality, while fresh pleural fluid had higher DNA quality compared to tissue biopsies. |
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Pleural fluid samples had lower cellularity, but higher DNA concentration and DNA quality index compared to matched FNA samples from the primary site. | ||
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A TKI resistance-conferring mutation (EGFR T790M) was detected in a pleural fluid sample but not in its matched tissue sample. | ||
| Yamamoto et al. [ | N/A |
Pleural fluid had similar RNA concentration with tissue biopsy and BAL. |
| Xiang et al. [ | Supernatants, Cell blocks |
Pleural fluid supernatant NGS showed 83.3% concordance (50/60) with tissue molecular analysis. |
| Liu et al. [ | Cell blocks |
Pleural fluid supernatant NGS showed 86.7% (26/30) concordance with tissue molecular analysis. |
| Zhang et al. [ | Supernatants, sDNA |
Pleural fluid supernatant NGS showed 100% sensitivity (15/15 mutations) in detecting previously confirmed EGFR mutations. |
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Pleural fluid supernatant NGS showed 86.7% concordance (13/15) with plasma molecular analysis. | ||
| Tong et al. [ | Supernatants, sDNA |
Pleural fluid supernatant molecular analysis showed higher cfDNA concentration, MAFs, chromosomal instability, and TMB and detected more CNVs, unique mutations, driver mutations, and drug resistance-conferring mutations compared to matched plasma samples. |
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Pleural fluid supernatant molecular analysis showed similar MAFs, chromosomal instability, and TMB compared to matched tissue samples. | ||
| Villatoro et al. [ | Supernatants |
Pleural fluid supernatant molecular analysis showed higher cfDNA concentration and MAFs compared to matched plasma and CSF samples. |
| Liao et al. [ | Supernatants, Cell pellets |
Pleural fluid NGS from both supernatants and cell pellets detected less SNVs per patient compared to matched plasma and tissue samples. |
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Pleural fluid NGS samples showed the highest mutation frequency for 29.1% (14/48) of the tested genes. | ||
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Pleural fluid NGS detected unique mutations not found in plasma or tissue molecular analysis. | ||
| Leichsenring et al. [ | Cell blocks |
Cell block NGS showed 100% concordance (2/2) with tissue in two patients. |
| Wang et al. [ | N/A |
MET amplifications were revealed in two patients progressing on TKIs post-treatment (undetected in pre-treatment tissue). |
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While detected in the pre-treatment tissue sample, pleural fluid NGS missed EGFR del19 mutation in one patient. | ||
| Yang et al. [ | Supernatants |
More mutations were revealed by post-treatment pleural fluid compared to matched pre-treatment lymph node FNA molecular analysis. |
NGS: next-generation sequencing, NSCLC: non-small cell lung cancer, FNA: fine needle aspiration, CSF: cerebrospinal fluid, BAL: bronchoalveolar lavage, sDNA: sediment DNA, MAF: mutation allele frequency, TMB: tumor mutational burden, CNV: copy number variations, cfDNA: cell-free DNA, SNV: single nucleotide variation, N/A: not available, TKI: tyrosine kinase inhibitor.
Correlation of pleural fluid NGS with cytomorphologic findings and tumor cellularity.
| First Author/Reference | Pleural Fluid Material | Summary of Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Yang et al. [ | Supernatants |
All malignant (9/9, five of which were from NSCLC) and suspicious (2/2, one of which was from NSCLC) pleural fluid samples revealed mutations. |
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No mutations were found in benign samples. | ||
| Yang et al. [ | Cell blocks |
A significant correlation between tumor cellularity and VAF was revealed. |
| Leichsenring et al. [ | Cell blocks |
Pleural fluid NGS showed false negative results in samples with low tumor cellularity (<10.0%). |
| Buttitta et al. [ | Cell blocks |
In low cellularity pleural fluid samples (0.3–7.0%), 70% (7/10) of mutations were detected by NGS compared to 20% (2/10) by Sanger sequencing. |
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In pleural fluid samples without malignant cells, only 20% (1/5) of mutations were detected by NGS and no mutations were detected by Sanger sequencing. | ||
| Liu et al. [ | Cell blocks |
NGS on pleural fluid samples with low tumor cells (<5%) revealed concordant mutations with matched tissue samples in 85.7% (6/7) of cases. |
| Carter et al. [ | Cell blocks |
No relationship was found between malignant pleural effusion volume and pleural fluid overall or tumor cellularity. |
NSCLC: non-small cell lung cancer, NGS: next-generation sequencing, VAF: variant allele frequency.
The value of supernatant-derived cfDNA.
| First Author/Reference | Pleural Fluid Material | Summary of Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Xiang et al. [ | Supernatants, Cell blocks |
Pleural fluid supernatant NGS revealed 89.1% (41/46) of somatic mutations vs. 54.3% (25/46) somatic mutations in cell blocks. |
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Low concordance was found between supernatant and cell block, tissue and cell block, but high concordance was found between supernatant and tissue NGS. | ||
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Supernatant analysis had a much shorter turnaround time compared to cell block preparation, which can last up to a week. | ||
| Yang et al. [ | Supernatants, Cell blocks |
Pleural fluid supernatant NGS showed 100% concordance (8/8 mutations) with cell block molecular analysis derived from the same pleural fluid specimens of three patients. |
| Li et al. [ | Supernatants, Cell blocks |
Comparable mutational profile and MAFs were found between supernatant and cell block NGS for all genes currently recommended for mutational testing. |
| Wei et al. [ | Aspirate, Cell blocks |
Higher MAFs were detected in the pleural fluid compared to cell block NGS in one patient. |
| Zhang et al. [ | Supernatants, sDNA |
Supernatant NGS showed 100% concordance (15/15) of EGFR mutations with sedimentary tumor cells in 15 patients. |
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Higher MAFs of supernatant were found compared to sedimentary tumor cell NGS. | ||
| Tong et al. [ | Supernatants, sDNA |
Pleural fluid supernatant NGS showed similar sensitivity (93%, 27/29 mutations) with sDNA (90%, 26/29) for driver mutations; two tissue mutations were missed in all samples. |
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Supernatant NGS had higher MAFs, chromosomal instability, and tumor mutational burden compared to sDNA NGS. | ||
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Supernatant NGS had higher sensitivity for tissue-determined mutations of M1a patients compared to sDNA NGS. | ||
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Supernatant had more total driver mutations (43) vs. sDNA (38) in 31 patients. | ||
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More EGFR T790M mutations were detected in supernatant (5/5) vs. sDNA (3/5). | ||
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More unique mutations were detected in supernatant vs. sDNA for M1b/c patients. | ||
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A non-significant sensitivity reduction (82% to 71%) was noted with hemorrhagic pleural effusion in supernatant compared to a significant sensitivity reduction in sDNA (64% to 34%). | ||
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Supernatant had a sensitivity of 86% for cytologically-negative samples, compared to sDNA that only had 9%. Supernatant remained superior even after excluding these cases ( | ||
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31% (20/64) of CNVs were detected in supernatant vs. 14% (9/64) in sDNA NGS. | ||
| Song et al. [ | Supernatants, Tumor exosomes |
77.9% concordance (243/312 mutations) were found between PE cfDNA and PE exoDNA NGS. |
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The concordance increased to 94.1% (128/136 mutations) after excluding CNVs. | ||
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The concordance for EGFR and ALK mutations in 18 patients was 100%. | ||
| Liao et al. [ | Supernatants, Cell pellets |
CNVs of 17 targetable genes were detected with cell pellet in 66.0% (31/47) of patients but not with supernatant NGS (unreadable due to fragmentation). |
NGS: next-generation sequencing; NSCLC: non-small cell lung cancer; CNV: copy number variation; sDNA: sediment tumor DNA; MAF: mutation allele frequency; PE: pleural effusion, exoDNA: exosomal DNA.
NGS in MPE for the evaluation of therapeutic resistance, response, and management.
| First Author/Reference | Pleural Fluid Material | Summary of Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Leichserning et al. [ | Cell blocks |
Clinically actionable mutations were detected that guided targeted therapy. |
| DiBardino et al. [ | Cell blocks, slides |
Mutations were detected in 4 out of the 5 patients whose pleural fluid samples were tested. These mutations changed management in two of these patients. |
| Yang et al. [ | Supernatants |
Resistance mutations were revealed in 2 patients; EGFR T790M and ALK p.G1202R were detected in two patients previously treated with erlotinib and crizotinib, respectively. |
| Villatoro et al. [ | Supernatants |
T790M was detected in pleural effusion supernatant NGS of two patients progressing on 1st/2nd generation TKIs and used to guide clinical decision. Clinical benefit was observed in both. |
| Zhang et al. [ | Cell blocks |
EGFR T790M mutation was detected in pleural fluid but not in tissue NGS of one patient (cancer heterogeneity). |
| Goldberg et al. [ | N/A |
C797N was found in pleural fluid NGS of one patient who had previously progressed on 2nd-line TKI with C797S mutation initially. |
| Li et al. [ | N/A |
NGS in a patient with no response to crizotinib revealed EML4-ALK fusion (25.3%), CDK2NA del, and TP53 mutation. |
| Wang et al. [ | N/A |
Pleural fluid NGS revealed MET amplification which guided targeted therapy (crizotinib). |
| Tong et al. [ | Supernatants, sDNA |
Pleural fluid supernatant NGS results were used to tailor TKI-based treatment in 10 patients who subsequently exhibited comparable PFS. |
| Patterson et al. [ | Cell cultures |
Homologous recombination repair was revealed in 12/13 cell lines. This information can be used to stratify patients for either PARPi or platinum therapy. |
| Roscilli et al. [ | Cell cultures from cell pellets |
Patients with the same mutational profile (EGFR del19, without T790M) exhibited different sensitivities to the same TKIs in two cultures (NGS not designed to detect epigenetic aberrations). |
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In vitro chemosensitivity testing for classic chemotherapeutic agents matched with clinical response to treatment. | ||
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In vitro chemosensitivity testing revealed synergistic chemotherapy combinations between classic chemotherapeutic agents. | ||
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In vitro chemosensitivity testing for classic chemotherapeutic agents matched with clinical response to treatment. Contrary to non-first line chemotherapy agents (gemcitabine and docetaxel), culture-based NGS could not predict response to TKI treatment. | ||
| Song et al. [ | Cell blocks |
EGFR mutations and ALK rearrangements were detected in 68/123 (55.3%) and 11/123 (9%) patients, respectively, while the EGFR wild-type was associated with a PD-L1 IHC score ≥ 50% |
NGS: next-generation sequencing, PFS: progression free survival, TKI: tyrosine kinase inhibitor, PARP: poly ADP ribose polymerase, sDNA: sediment DNA.
The role of NGS in malignant pleural effusions from different types of cancers (other than lung).
| First Author/Reference | Cancer | Pleural Fluid Material | Summary of Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yang et al. [ | Lung, Breast, GI/Pancreas, Primary peritoneal | Supernatants |
Pleural fluid supernatant NGS showed concordant genotype with NGS performed on lymph node FNA cell block in a patient with TNBC who underwent chemotherapy in between. |
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Pleural fluid supernatant NGS showed concordant genotype with NGS performed on tumor tissue in a patient with CRC who underwent targeted therapy in between. | |||
| Shah et al. [ | Ovarian | Cytospins |
Pleural fluid NGS had the least DNA input but highest coverage compared to frozen tumor tissue, FFPE tumor tissue, and matched normal blood from patients with a metastatic ovarian high-grade serous carcinoma. |
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Pleural fluid NGS showed the highest TP53 MAFs in two patients. | |||
| Xu et al. [ | Medulloblastoma | N/A |
While undetectable in the original tumor tissue, pleural effusion NGS revealed a 17q gain in a patient with medulloblastoma at the time of recurrence. |
| Zhou et al. [ | Gastric | Supernatants |
Concordant ATM (indel, frameshift, SNV, fusion), MET, and SMAD3 mutations were detected in pleural fluid, plasma, and ascites NGS from an advanced gastric cancer patient. |
NSCLC: non-small cell lung cancer, NGS: next-generation sequencing, TNBC: triple negative breast cancer, CRC: colorectal cancer, FFPE: formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded, FNA: fine-needle aspiration, ATM: ataxia telangiectasia-mutated gene, SNV: single nucleotide variant, MET: mesenchymal to epithelial transition factor, MAF: mutation allele frequency.
Figure 1Pleural fluid processing to facilitate diagnosis, prognosis, and guide therapy of metastatic cancers. NGS = Next generation sequencing, LBC = Liquid-based cytology.