| Literature DB >> 33420073 |
Gillian Vandekerkhove1, Jean-Michel Lavoie2, Matti Annala1,3, Andrew J Murtha1, Nora Sundahl4, Simon Walz5, Takeshi Sano1, Sinja Taavitsainen3, Elie Ritch1, Ladan Fazli1, Antonio Hurtado-Coll1, Gang Wang6, Matti Nykter3, Peter C Black1, Tilman Todenhöfer7,8, Piet Ost4, Ewan A Gibb9, Kim N Chi1,2, Bernhard J Eigl10, Alexander W Wyatt11.
Abstract
Molecular stratification can improve the management of advanced cancers, but requires relevant tumor samples. Metastatic urothelial carcinoma (mUC) is poised to benefit given a recent expansion of treatment options and its high genomic heterogeneity. We profile minimally-invasive plasma circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) samples from 104 mUC patients, and compare to same-patient tumor tissue obtained during invasive surgery. Patient ctDNA abundance is independently prognostic for overall survival in patients initiating first-line systemic therapy. Importantly, ctDNA analysis reproduces the somatic driver genome as described from tissue-based cohorts. Furthermore, mutation concordance between ctDNA and matched tumor tissue is 83.4%, enabling benchmarking of proposed clinical biomarkers. While 90% of mutations are identified across serial ctDNA samples, concordance for serial tumor tissue is significantly lower. Overall, our exploratory analysis demonstrates that genomic profiling of ctDNA in mUC is reliable and practical, and mitigates against disease undersampling inherent to studying archival primary tumor foci. We urge the incorporation of cell-free DNA profiling into molecularly-guided clinical trials for mUC.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33420073 PMCID: PMC7794518 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20493-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919