| Literature DB >> 34050156 |
Peter Peneder1, Adrian M Stütz1, Didier Surdez2,3, Manuela Krumbholz4, Sabine Semper4, Mathieu Chicard2, Nathan C Sheffield5, Gaelle Pierron6, Eve Lapouble6, Marcus Tötzl1, Bekir Ergüner7, Daniele Barreca7, André F Rendeiro7, Abbas Agaimy8, Heidrun Boztug9, Gernot Engstler9, Michael Dworzak9, Marie Bernkopf1, Sabine Taschner-Mandl1, Inge M Ambros1, Ola Myklebost10,11, Perrine Marec-Bérard12, Susan Ann Burchill13, Bernadette Brennan14, Sandra J Strauss15,16, Jeremy Whelan16, Gudrun Schleiermacher2, Christiane Schaefer17, Uta Dirksen17, Caroline Hutter1,9, Kjetil Boye18, Peter F Ambros1, Olivier Delattre2,6, Markus Metzler4, Christoph Bock19,20,21, Eleni M Tomazou22.
Abstract
Sequencing of cell-free DNA in the blood of cancer patients (liquid biopsy) provides attractive opportunities for early diagnosis, assessment of treatment response, and minimally invasive disease monitoring. To unlock liquid biopsy analysis for pediatric tumors with few genetic aberrations, we introduce an integrated genetic/epigenetic analysis method and demonstrate its utility on 241 deep whole-genome sequencing profiles of 95 patients with Ewing sarcoma and 31 patients with other pediatric sarcomas. Our method achieves sensitive detection and classification of circulating tumor DNA in peripheral blood independent of any genetic alterations. Moreover, we benchmark different metrics for cell-free DNA fragmentation analysis, and we introduce the LIQUORICE algorithm for detecting circulating tumor DNA based on cancer-specific chromatin signatures. Finally, we combine several fragmentation-based metrics into an integrated machine learning classifier for liquid biopsy analysis that exploits widespread epigenetic deregulation and is tailored to cancers with low mutation rates. Clinical associations highlight the potential value of cfDNA fragmentation patterns as prognostic biomarkers in Ewing sarcoma. In summary, our study provides a comprehensive analysis of circulating tumor DNA beyond recurrent genetic aberrations, and it renders the benefits of liquid biopsy more readily accessible for childhood cancers.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34050156 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23445-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919