| Literature DB >> 33803882 |
Francis Yew Fu Tieng1, Nadiah Abu1, Learn-Han Lee2, Nurul-Syakima Ab Mutalib1,2,3.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most commonly-diagnosed cancer in the world and ranked second for cancer-related mortality in humans. Microsatellite instability (MSI) is an indicator for Lynch syndrome (LS), an inherited cancer predisposition, and a prognostic marker which predicts the response to immunotherapy. A recent trend in immunotherapy has transformed cancer treatment to provide medical alternatives that have not existed before. It is believed that MSI-high (MSI-H) CRC patients would benefit from immunotherapy due to their increased immune infiltration and higher neo-antigenic loads. MSI testing such as immunohistochemistry (IHC) and PCR MSI assay has historically been a tissue-based procedure that involves the testing of adequate tissue with a high concentration of cancer cells, in addition to the requirement for paired normal tissues. The invasive nature and specific prerequisite of such tests might hinder its application when surgery is not an option or when the tissues are insufficient. The application of next-generation sequencing, which is highly sensitive, in combination with liquid biopsy, therefore, presents an interesting possibility worth exploring. This review aimed to discuss the current body of evidence supporting the potential of liquid biopsy as a tool for MSI testing in CRC.Entities:
Keywords: cell-free DNA; circulating tumor DNA; circulating tumor cells; colorectal cancer; liquid biopsy; microsatellite instability; non-invasive
Year: 2021 PMID: 33803882 PMCID: PMC8003257 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics11030544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1(A–C) Functioning mismatch repair system (MMR) capable of repairing DNA mismatch error, whereas (b,c) Defective mismatch repair system (MMR-D) which resulted in microsatellite instability (MSI).
Figure 2Possible sources of DNA for MSI testing in liquid biopsy.
Summary of recent findings of MSI in cfDNA, ctDNA and CTCs from CRC.
| Source | Type | Year | Finding | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| cfDNA | 2 patients with MMR-D CRC tumors | 2017 | Effectiveness of the TMB report from cfDNA to predict MMR-D or MSI status and the possible response towards immunotherapy among CRC patients. | [ |
| cfDNA | 13 CRC patients | 2018 | Feasibility of MSI detection in cfDNA with possible reflective of TMB in CRC. MSI assessment from cfDNA could predict clinical outcomes of immunotherapy. | [ |
| cfDNA | Plasma from 29 metastatic cancers (19 CRC, 3 ampullary, 3 small intestine, 2 endometrial, 1 gastric, and 1 thyroid cancer) | 2019 | Development of a hybrid-capture-based 98 kb pan-cancer gene panel with a multifactorial error correction method and a novel peak-finding algorithm, capable of predicting progression-free survival in MSI and TMB-High patients treated with PD-1 blockade. | [ |
| cfDNA | 1145 archived samples (residual plasma and/or cfDNA) collected and processed as part of routine standard-of-care clinical testing in the Guardant Health CLIA laboratory | 2019 | MSI assessment from cfDNA showed higher specificity, accuracy and sensitivity, with a detection limit of 0.1 percent of the tumor content than conventional tissue biopsy-based MSI detection. | [ |
| cfDNA | Blood samples from 12 patients with MSI-H gastrointestinal tract cancer | 2019 | Detection of MSI status from cfDNA was possible via the Guardant Health Omni 2.0 mb panel. MSI-H cancer patients resistant to immune checkpoint blockade showed RNF43, APC and/or CTNNB1 mutations, suggesting the importance of co-activation of the WNT/B-Catenin pathway. | [ |
| cfDNA | 30 plasma or serum from 14 patients with locally advanced CRC, mCRC or endometrial tumors | 2020 | The MSI-ddPCR assays were clinically sensitive, highly accurate and appropriate for the quantitative ctDNA detection in observational studies. | [ |
| cfDNA | cfDNA sequencing data from 39 patients and 1565 WES samples from TCGA were treated as the training set | 2021 | Development of MSIsensor-ct, a bioinformatics tool based on a machine learning protocol, dedicated to detect MSI status using cfDNA sequencing data with 100% accuracy within the LOD of 0.05% ctDNA content. | [ |
| ctDNA | Plasma, matched tumor tissue and blood samples from 200 patients | 2018 | Correct identification of 13 MSI-H patients by MSI testing in ctDNA, in concordance with the results of MSI testing in tumor tissue with a sensitivity of 100%. | [ |
| ctDNA | Plasma isolated from the peripheral blood from 222 consecutiveEGFR, KRAS, BRAF, and/or ESR1-positive NSCLC, colorectalcancer, or breast cancer patients | 2019 | Cell-free circulating tumor DNA-based MSI detection using Guardant360 was highly concordant with tissue-based testing, enabling highly accurate detection of MSI status concurrent with comprehensive genomic profiling. | [ |
| CTCs | 8 single CTC from 8 individual CRC patients with matched tumor tissue | 2014 | Identification of disparity in MSI status between primary tumor, liver metastasis and individual isolated CTC. | [ |
| CTCs | CTCs from peripheral blood of 198 mCRC patients | 2019 | Detection of CEACAM5 mRNA-positive CTCs as an adverse prognostic factor which correlated with poor clinical outcomes in MSI-high tumors patients. | [ |
cfDNA = cell-free DNA, CRC = colorectal cancer, ctDNA = circulating tumor DNA, CTC = circulating tumor cell, ddPCR = droplet digital polymerase chain reaction, LOD = limit of detection, MMR-D = mismatch repair deficiency, mCRC = metastatic CRC, MSI = microsatellite instability, NSCLC = non-small cell lung cancer, TMB = tumor mutation burden, WES = whole exome sequencing.
Summary of pros and cons of MSI testing in tissue and liquid biopsies.
| Type | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Tissue biopsy | Clinically validated; | Not incorporated into the routine analysis; |
| Liquid biopsy | Rapid detection; | Still in early development without established clinical practice rules; |
CRC = colorectal cancer, IHC = immunohistochemistry, ITH = intratumoral heterogeneity, MSI = microsatellite instability, PCR = polymerase chain reaction, TMB = tumor mutation burden.