Literature DB >> 34905549

Correction: Urine tumor DNA detection of minimal residual disease in muscle-invasive bladder cancer treated with curative-intent radical cystectomy: A cohort study.

Pradeep S Chauhan, Kevin Chen, Ramandeep K Babbra, Wenjia Feng, Nadja Pejovic, Armaan Nallicheri, Peter K Harris, Katherine Dienstbach, Andrew Atkocius, Lenon Maguire, Faridi Qaium, Jeffrey J Szymanski, Brian C Baumann, Li Ding, Dengfeng Cao, Melissa A Reimers, Eric H Kim, Zachary L Smith, Vivek K Arora, Aadel A Chaudhuri.   

Abstract

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003732.].

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34905549      PMCID: PMC8670709          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003876

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS Med        ISSN: 1549-1277            Impact factor:   11.069


In the abstract, the number of patients in the pCR and no pCR groups are interchanged. It should be n = 26 for patients classified as having residual disease detected in their surgical sample, and n = 16 for those who achieved a pCR. Additionally, the DRR acronym in the abstract should not be present. Please see below for the corrected abstract:

Background

The standard of care treatment for muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) is radical cystectomy, which is typically preceded by neoadjuvant chemotherapy. However, the inability to assess minimal residual disease (MRD) noninvasively limits our ability to offer bladder-sparing treatment. Here, we sought to develop a liquid biopsy solution via urine tumor DNA (utDNA) analysis.

Methods and findings

We applied urine Cancer Personalized Profiling by Deep Sequencing (uCAPP-Seq), a targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) method for detecting utDNA, to urine cell-free DNA (cfDNA) samples acquired between April 2019 and November 2020 on the day of curative-intent radical cystectomy from 42 patients with localized bladder cancer. The average age of patients was 69 years (range: 50 to 86), of whom 76% (32/42) were male, 64% (27/42) were smokers, and 76% (32/42) had a confirmed diagnosis of MIBC. Among MIBC patients, 59% (19/32) received neoadjuvant chemotherapy. utDNA variant calling was performed noninvasively without prior sequencing of tumor tissue. The overall utDNA level for each patient was represented by the non-silent mutation with the highest variant allele fraction after removing germline variants. Urine was similarly analyzed from 15 healthy adults. utDNA analysis revealed a median utDNA level of 0% in healthy adults and 2.4% in bladder cancer patients. When patients were classified as those who had residual disease detected in their surgical sample (n = 26) compared to those who achieved a pathologic complete response (pCR; n = 16), median utDNA levels were 4.3% vs. 0%, respectively (p = 0.002). Using an optimal utDNA threshold to define MRD detection, positive utDNA MRD detection was highly correlated with the absence of pCR (p < 0.001) with a sensitivity of 81% and specificity of 81%. Leave-one-out cross-validation applied to the prediction of pathologic response based on utDNA MRD detection in our cohort yielded a highly significant accuracy of 81% (p = 0.007). Moreover, utDNA MRD-positive patients exhibited significantly worse progression-free survival (PFS; HR = 7.4; 95% CI: 1.4–38.9; p = 0.02) compared to utDNA MRD-negative patients. Concordance between urine- and tumor-derived mutations, determined in 5 MIBC patients, was 85%. Tumor mutational burden (TMB) in utDNA MRD-positive patients was inferred from the number of non-silent mutations detected in urine cfDNA by applying a linear relationship derived from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) whole exome sequencing of 409 MIBC tumors. We suggest that about 58% of these patients with high inferred TMB might have been candidates for treatment with early immune checkpoint blockade. Study limitations included an analysis restricted only to single-nucleotide variants, survival differences diminished by surgery, and a low number of DNA damage response mutations detected after neoadjuvant chemotherapy at the MRD time point.

Conclusions

utDNA MRD detection prior to curative-intent radical cystectomy for bladder cancer correlated significantly with pathologic response, which may help select patients for bladder-sparing treatment. utDNA MRD detection also correlated significantly with PFS. Furthermore, utDNA can be used to noninvasively infer TMB, which could facilitate personalized immunotherapy for bladder cancer in the future.
  1 in total

1.  Urine tumor DNA detection of minimal residual disease in muscle-invasive bladder cancer treated with curative-intent radical cystectomy: A cohort study.

Authors:  Pradeep S Chauhan; Kevin Chen; Ramandeep K Babbra; Wenjia Feng; Nadja Pejovic; Armaan Nallicheri; Peter K Harris; Katherine Dienstbach; Andrew Atkocius; Lenon Maguire; Faridi Qaium; Jeffrey J Szymanski; Brian C Baumann; Li Ding; Dengfeng Cao; Melissa A Reimers; Eric H Kim; Zachary L Smith; Vivek K Arora; Aadel A Chaudhuri
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2021-08-31       Impact factor: 11.069

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.