| Literature DB >> 34915883 |
Maria Gabriela O Fernandes1,2,3, Natália Cruz-Martins4,5, José Carlos Machado6,7,8, José Luís Costa6,7,8, Venceslau Hespanhol9,6,7,8.
Abstract
Liquid biopsy (LB) has boosted a remarkable change in the management of cancer patients by contributing to tumour genomic profiling. Plasma circulating cell-free tumour DNA (ctDNA) is the most widely searched tumour-related element for clinical application. Specifically, for patients with lung cancer, LB has revealed valuable to detect the diversity of targetable genomic alterations and to detect and monitor the emergence of resistance mechanisms. Furthermore, its non-invasive nature helps to overcome the difficulty in obtaining tissue samples, offering a comprehensive view about tumour diversity. However, the use of the LB to support diagnostic and therapeutic decisions still needs further clarification. In this sense, this review aims to provide a critical view of the clinical importance of plasma ctDNA analysis, the most widely applied LB, and its limitations while anticipating concepts that will intersect the present and future of LB in non-small cell lung cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Adenocarcinoma; Circulating cell-free tumour DNA; Liquid biopsy; Lung cancer; Next Generation Sequencing; Tumour genotyping
Year: 2021 PMID: 34915883 PMCID: PMC8680243 DOI: 10.1186/s12935-021-02382-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell Int ISSN: 1475-2867 Impact factor: 5.722
Tumour-related components characteristics and potentialities
| Components | Characteristics and potential applications |
|---|---|
| CTC | Cells found in the blood of patients with solid tumours Surrogate marker for tumour growth and aggressiveness Genomic analysis |
| Exosomes | Cell-derived extracellular vesicles containing proteins, DNA, mRNAs, and miRNAs Biomarker analysis Potential therapeutic application |
| Circulating RNAs | miRNAs are the most abundant circulating RNA molecules miRNAs amount and composition differ between cancer and non-cancer landscape and correlates with that of solid tumours Potential early diagnosis biomarker |
| ctDNA | Tumour-derived fragmented DNA in the bloodstream that is not associated with cells Detection of oncogenic mutations, prognostic biomarker, tumour burden and minimal residual detection ctDNA methylation profiles |
| Tumour educated Platelets (TEPs) | TEPs may offer certain advantages over other blood-based biosources, including their abundance and easy isolation, high-quality RNA, and capacity to process RNA in response to external signals Different RNA profiles in platelets from cancer patients and healthy individuals |
| Proteins | Protein/proteome profile as a biomarker for cancer detection; predictive and prognostic biomarkers |
CTC circulating tumour cell, ctDNA circulating tumour DNA, mRNA messenger RNA, miRNAS microRNAs
ctDNA plasma detection of EGFR mutation
| Reference | Method of detection | Study type/ Sample size | Sensitivity/ PPA | Specificity/NPA | Concordance/ OPA between tissue and liquid biopsy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Douillard J et al. [ | QUIAGEN therascreen® EGFR RGQ PCR Kit | Prospective, single-arm phase IV study (IFUM study); N = 652 | 65.7% | 99.8% | 94.3% |
| Reck M et al. [ | QUIAGEN therascreen® EGFR RGQ PCR Kit; Cobas® EGFR mutations test version 2; Cycleave®; PNA-LNA PCR Clamp; other | Multicenter (ASSESS study); N = 1162 | 46% | 97% | 89% |
| Han B et al. [ | Cobas® EGFR mutations test version 2 | Multicenter (IGNITE study); N = 2561 | 46.9% | 95.6% | 80.5% |
| Wu YL et al. [ | QUIAGEN therascreen® EGFR RGQ PCR Kit | Phase III, Prospective (Lux-Lung 3 and 6 studies); N = 334 (plasma); N = 287 (serum) | 60.5% (plasma) 28.6% (serum) | n.r | n.r |
| Jenkins et al. [ | Cobas® EGFR Mutation Test v2 | AURA extension and AURA2 phase II studies; N = 210 | T790M: 61% L858R: 76% Del19: 91% | T790M: 79% L858R: 98% Del19: 98% | T790M: 65% L858R: 85% Del19: 90% |
| Oxnard et al. [ | BEAMing (Sysmex®) | Retrospective (AURA phase I) N = 216 | T790M: 70% L858R: 86% Del19: 82% | T790M: 69% L858R: 97% Del19: 98% | n.r |
| Karlovich et al. [ | Cobas® EGFR mutations test; BEAMing (Symex® Inostics GmbH) | Prospective, multicentre, observational and phase-1 TIGER-X; N = 153 | (Cobas/BEAMING) Activating mutations: 73%/82% T790M: 64%/73% | (Cobas/BEAMING) Activating mutations: 100% T790M: 98%/50% | (Cobas/BEAMING) Activating mutations: 80% T790M: 86%/67% |
| Sacher et al. [ | Droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) | Prospective; N = 180 (120 newly diagnosed + 60 acquired resistance) | Del19: 82% L858R: 74% T790M: 77% | Del19:100% L858R: 100% T790M: 63% | Del19: 91% L858R: 80% T790M: 40% |
| Zheng D et al. [ | Droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) | N = 117 | T790M: 81% | T790M: 100% | 88% |
PPA Positive percent agreement, NPA Negative percent agreement, OPA overall percent agreement, n.r. not reported
Meta-analysis on the diagnostic accuracy of LB for detecting EGFR mutations
| Reference | Study type/ Sample size | Sensitivity/PPA | Specificity/NPA | Concordance/ OPA between tissue and liquid biopsy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quian et al. [ | 27 studies N = 3938 | 60% | 94% | n.r |
| Luo et al. [ | 20 studies N = 2012 | 67.4% | 93.5% | n.r |
| Qiu M et al. [ | 27 studies N = 3110 | 62% | 95.9% | n.r |
| Mao et al. [ | 25 studies N = 2605 | 61% | 90% | 79% |
| Zhou et al. [ | 32 studies N = 4527 | 70% | 98% | n.r |
| Passiglia et al. [ | 21 studies N = 1639 | 67% | 80% | n.r |
PPA Positive percent agreement, NPA Negative percent agreement, OPA overall percent agreement, n.r. not reported
NGS-based studies analysing cfDNA for EGFR mutation detection
| Reference | Method of detection | Study type/ Sample size | Sensitivity/ PPA | Specificity/ NPA | Concordance/ OPA between tissue and liquid biopsy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kukita Y et al. [ | NGS amplicon-based (Ion Torrent PGM®) | Retrospective n = 155 (144 plasma and 11 other fluids) | Del 19: 73% L858R or L861Q: 78% | n.r | n.r |
| Prospective n = 22 | 78% | 92% | 86% | ||
| Reckamp et al. [ | NGS Amplicon -based (Illumina MiSeq platform®) | Retrospective (TIGER-X study) N = 60 (urine and plasma) | T790M 93% L858R 100% Del19 87% (urine: T790M 72%; L858R 75% Del19 67%) | T790M 94% L858R 100% Del19 96% (urine: T790M 96%; L858R 100% Del19 94%) | n.r |
| Papadimitrakopoulou V et al. [ | Cobas® EGFR Mutation Test v2; | Retrospective analysis from AURA 3 study N = 562 | T790M: 51% L858R: 68% Del19: 82% | T790M: 77% L858R: 99% Del 19: 99% | T790M: 61% L858R: 88% Del 19: 89% |
| ddPCR (Biodesix®) | T790M: 58% L858R: 70% Del19: 73% | T790M: NA L858R: 98% Del 19: 100% | n.r | ||
| NGS (Guardant360®, Guardant Health) | T790M: 66% L858R: 63% Del19: 79% | T790M: NA L858R: 98% Del 19: 99% | n.r | ||
| Schwartzberg et al. [ | NGS HiSeq® 2500 (Illumina) | Prospective N = 117 | 94% | 100% | 94% |
PPA Positive percent agreement, NPA Negative percent agreement, OPA overall percent agreement. n.r. not reported
Characteristics of commercially approved platforms for ctDNA
| Methodology | Assay | Technique | Sample | Gene Spectrum | Approved indications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allelic-specific PCR | Cobas EGFR mutation Test v2® | Real-time PCR | DNA derived from FFPE tissue or cfDNA from plasma | 42 EGFR mutations in exons 18, 19, 20, 21 | FDA approval for detection of EGFR del19, EGFR L858R, and EGFR T790M; FDA, Jun and Sept, 2016 [ |
| Therascreen® EGFR Plasma RGQ PCR kit | Real-time PCR | cfDNA from plasma | 29 EGFR mutations in exons 19, 20, 21 | E.U. approval for detection of EGFR del19 and EGFR L858R; EMA, Jan 2015 [ | |
| AmoyDx Super-ARMS® EFGR mutation test kit | Real-time PCR | Compatible with FFPE tissue or plasma/serum samples | 41 EGFR mutations in exons 18–21, including L858R, exon 19 deletions, and T790M | Chinese FDA approval for detection of EGFR del19, EGFR 858R, and EGFR T790M China FDA. Jan 2018 [ | |
| NGS | Guardant360 CDx® | Targeted hybridization-based capture technology | cfDNA | 73-gene panel (single nucleotide variants (SNVs), insertions and deletions (indels) in 55 genes, copy number amplifications (CNAs) in two [ | FDA, Nov 2016 [ |
| FoundationOne Liquid CDx® | Targeted hybridization-based capture technology | cfDNA | 311 genes panel including substitutions, insertions and deletions (indels), rearrangements and copy number losses only in BRCA1 and BRCA2 | US FDA, August 2020 [ |
FDA Food and Drug Administration, FFPE Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded
Major studies focus on the cfDNA plasma detection of ALK fusions
| Reference | Method of detection | Study type/ Sample size | Sensitivity/ PPA | Specificity/ NPA | Concordance/ OPA between tissue and liquid biopsy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kunimasa et al. [ | PCR-based target sequencing ALK intron19 | N = 20 | 50% | 100% | n.r |
| Mezquita et al. [ | Amplicon-based (InVision™) | Retrospective N = 59/6 | ALK 78%/ROS1 100% | n.r | 86% |
| Schwartzberg et al. [ | NGS HiSeq® 2500 (Illumina) | Prospective N = 115 | 50% | 100% | 96% |
| Cui S et al. [ | Capture-based NGS | N = 39 | 54% | 100% | n.r |
| Wang Ye et al. [ | Capture-based NGS | N = 24 | 79% | 100% | 92% |
| Horn L et al. [ | Hybrid-capture system NGS (Resolution Bioscience) | (Phase I/II multicohort eXalt2 trial) N = 76 (22 with paired pre-treatment tissue and plasma) | n.r | n.r | 91% |
| Dagogo-Jack I et al. [ | Hybrid-capture next-generation sequencing | Prospective N = 22 with ALK progressive disease | 86% ALK fusions 50% ALK mutations | n.r | 100% 100% |
PPA Positive percent agreement, NPA Negative percent agreement, OPA overall percent agreement. n.r. not reported
Studies focus on the cfDNA plasma NGS for genotyping of newly diagnosed NSCLC
| Study | Method | Sample size | Sensitivity | Specificity | Concordance tissue/liquid biopsy % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conraud et al. [ | NGS amplicon-based (ion Torrent PGM) | N = 68 | Del19: 55% Exon 18 = 100% All = 58% | 68% | |
| Thompson et al. [ | NGS 70 genes Guardant360 panel Illumina Hi-Seq 2500 | N = 102 | 84% (50 drivers, 12 resistance and 22 in additional genes) | NA | 60% (79% for EGFR mutations) |
| Leighl et al. [ | NGS Guardant360CDX | N = 282 | 80% for any guideline-recommended biomarker | For (EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF) concordance was > 98.2% | |
| Aggarwal et al. [ | NGS Guardant360CDX | N = 323 | 90% | ||
| Li et al. [ | NGS hybrid capture panel covering 37 lung cancer-related genes | N = 127 | 75% for de novo plasma detection of known oncogenic drivers | 100% | NA |
| Fernandes et al. [ | NGS amplicon-based | N = 115 | 81% | 95% | 76% |
| Papadopoulou et al. [ | NGS amplicon-based | N = 121 (36 with matched plasma and tissue) | 49% at least one mutation detected 89% sensitivity for the matched population | 86% | |
| Mack et al. [ | NGS Guardant 360 | N = 8388 | Somatic alterations were detected in 86% of samples. Activating alterations in actionable oncogenes were identified in 48% of patients, | ||
| Schrock et al. [ | NGS hybrid capture panel covering 62 lung cancer-related genes | N = 1552 | Genomic alterations were detected in 86% of samples. Most frequent were: (TP53) (59%), EGFR (25%), and KRAS (17%) |
Fig. 1Proposed algorithm for clinical interpretation of a liquid biopsy for the detection of targetable mutations. For clinical interpretation, a targetable alteration found in a liquid biopsy is considered a true positive finding and is used to guide treatment selection. A liquid biopsy with no detectable alteration must be confirmed with a tissue biopsy to overcome false negative results
Fig. 2Proposed workflow integrating liquid biopsy in the management of advanced NSCLC