| Literature DB >> 35264786 |
Gianluca Mauri1,2, Pietro Paolo Vitiello3,4, Alberto Sogari3,4, Giovanni Crisafulli3,4, Andrea Sartore-Bianchi2,5, Silvia Marsoni1, Salvatore Siena2,5, Alberto Bardelli6,7.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most prevalent and deadly cancers worldwide. Despite recent improvements in treatment and prevention, most of the current therapeutic options are weighted by side effects impacting patients' quality of life. Better patient selection towards systemic treatments represents an unmet clinical need. The recent multidisciplinary and molecular advancements in the treatment of CRC patients demand the identification of efficient biomarkers allowing to personalise patient care. Currently, core tumour biopsy specimens represent the gold-standard biological tissue to identify such biomarkers. However, technical feasibility, tumour heterogeneity and cancer evolution are major limitations of this single-snapshot approach. Genotyping circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) has been addressed as potentially overcoming such limitations. Indeed, ctDNA has been retrospectively demonstrated capable of identifying minimal residual disease post-surgery and post-adjuvant treatment, as well as spotting druggable molecular alterations for tailoring treatments in metastatic disease. In this review, we summarise the available evidence on ctDNA applicability in CRC. Then, we review ongoing clinical trials assessing how liquid biopsy can be used interventionally to guide therapeutic choice in localised, locally advanced and metastatic CRC. Finally, we discuss how its widespread could transform CRC patients' management, dissecting its limitations while suggesting improvement strategies.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35264786 PMCID: PMC9346106 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-022-01769-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 9.075
Fig. 1Interventional liquid biopsy can orient therapeutic decision-making in CRC.
Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis through liquid biopsy has proven to be a robust method to tailor personalised treatments for CRC) patient care. Promising results have been achieved in the post-surgical adjuvant setting and in driving treatment choice in locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) after neoadjuvant treatment. Ongoing and future studies, exploiting ctDNA to guide anti-EGFR rechallenge therapy and treatment choices based on mutational and molecular CRC evaluation, will further expand the use of interventional liquid biopsy in CRC patients care. The “traffic lights”, close to each box where clinical strategies are defined, summarise the level of evidence supporting applicability of interventional ctDNA in the clinical practice. Figure created with BioRender.com. Keys: LARC locally advanced rectal cancer, * ctDNA negativity or positivity might be taken into account in patients treated with neoadjuvant multimodal treatment and achieving near clinical complete response (cCR) or cCR to evaluate if they might be candidate to non-operative management rather than curative surgery, respectively; cCR clinical complete response, EGFR epidermal growth factor receptor, green light = initial prospective data available, orange line = only retrospective data available, red light = only partial data available.
Main published retrospective and interventional studies suggesting the potential clinical role of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) assessment in colorectal cancer patients.
| Study | Disease stage | ctDNA method | N.° Pts. | Colon/rectal | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (A) | |||||
| Tie et al. 2016 [ | II | Safe-SeqS assay | 231 | 231/0 | • Pts after surgery not receiving adjuvant chemotherapy: post-operative ctDNA detection correlates with higher risk of recurrence (HR 18; 95% CI 7.9–40) • Pts receiving adjuvant cytotoxic regimens: ctDNA positivity after treatment correlates with an inferior RFS (HR 11; 95% CI 1.8–68). |
| Diehl et al. 2008 [ | II–IV | Real-time PCR | 20 | NA | • Worse RFS in ctDNA-positive pts after surgery ( |
| Tie et al. 2021 [ | IV (CRLM resections) | Safe-SeqS) assay | 54 | NA | • ctDNA post-operative positive pts had lower RFS (HR 6.3; 95% CI 2.58–15.2) and OS (HR 4.2; 95% CI 1.5–11.8). • ctDNA clearance observed in 3 pts receiving post-operative treatment, 2 of whom remained disease-free. • End-of-treatment (surgery ± adjuvant cytotoxic regimen) ctDNA positivity was associated with 0% 5-year RFS compared to 75.6% in those ctDNA-negative (HR 14.9; 95% CI 4.94–44.7). |
| Tie et al. 2019 (a) [ | III | Safe-SeqS) assay | 96 | 96/0 | • Positive ctDNA post-surgery correlates with an inferior RFS (HR 3.8; 95% CI, 2.4–21.0). • Positive ctDNA post-adjuvant therapy: lower 3-year RFI (HR, 6.8; 95% CI, 11.0–157.0). • Post-surgical ctDNA status is independently associated with RFI after adjusting for clinicopathologic risk factors (HR, 7.5; 95% CI, 3.5–16.1). |
| Reinert et al. 2016 [ | I–IV | ddPCR | 11 | 5/6 | • 6/6 post-surgery positive ctDNA pts relapsed while 0/5 ctDNA-negative did (8 pts were ctDNA-positive prior to surgery but 1 was stage 1 CRC pts and 2 were stage 2 CRC pts). |
| Reinert et al. 2019 [ | I–III | HiSeq 2500 system, Illumina Inc | 125 | 119/6 | • Pre-operative ctDNA-positive pts were 108/122 (88.5%). • Post-operative ctDNA-positive pts were more likely to relapse (HR 7.2; 95% CI, 2.7–19.0). • Positive ctDNA pts after adjuvant cytotoxic regimens were more likely to relapse (HR 17.5; 95% CI, 5.4–56.5). • 3/10 ctDNA-positive pts were cleared by adjuvant regimens • In all multivariate analyses, ctDNA positivity was independently associated with relapse after adjusting for known clinicopathologic risk factors. |
| Parikh et al. 2021 [ | I–IV | Guardant Reveal, Health panel | 84 | 54/30 | • PPV in determining disease recurrence in ctDNA-positive pts: 100% • Integrating epigenomic signatures increased sensitivity by 25–36% versus genomic alterations alone. |
| Taieb et al. 2019 [ | II–III | ddPCR | 805 | NA | • 2-year DFS: 64% in ctDNA-positive versus 82% in those negative (HR 1.75; 95%CI 1.25–2.45). • In the multivariate analysis including age, gender, MSI, perforation, T stage, N stage and treatment arm (3 vs 6 months adjuvant treatment) ctDNA was confirmed an independent prognostic marker (HR 1.85 95% CI 1.31–2.61). |
| Kotaka et al. 2022 [ | I–IV | Signatera bespoke multiplex-PCR NGS assay | 1564 | NA | • Post-operative ctDNA positivity at 4 weeks after surgery was associated with an inferior DFS (HR 10.9; 95% CI 7.8–15.4). • DFS rates by ctDNA dynamics at 4 and 12 weeks postoperatively were significantly different between “positive to negative” versus “positive to positive” (HR 15.8; 95% CI 5.7–44.2). • Adjuvant treatment improved DFS in stages II, III and IV (analysed separately) among ctDNA-positive patients, while those ctDNA-negative do no benefit from medical post-operative treatment (HR 1.3; 95% CI 0.5–3.6). |
| (B) | |||||
| Tie et al. 2019 (b) [ | II–III | Safe-SeqS) assay | 159 | 0/159 | • HR for recurrence in ctDNA-negative vs ctDNA-positive after pre-operative chemotherapy: HR6.6 ( • 3-year RFS rate: 33% for the post-operative ctDNA-positive patients versus 87% for the post-operative ctDNA-negative patients, irrespective of clinicopathological risk factors (HR 6.0; |
| Vidal et al. 2021 [ | II–III | NGS (Guardant Reveal) | 72 | 0/72 | • Detectable pre-surgery ctDNA after chemotherapy significantly associated with systemic recurrence, shorter DFS (HR 4; • No significant association between ctDNA status and pathologic response. |
| McDuff et al. 2021 [ | II–III | NGS (Guardant Reveal) | 29 | 0/29 | • Overall margin-negative, node-negative resection rate: 88% in undetectable pre-operative ctDNA versus 44% in patients with detectable pre-operative ctDNA ( • Relapse for post-operative ctDNA-positive versus ctDNA-negative: 100% vs 13.3% (HR = 11.56; |
| Khakoo et al. 2020 [ | II–III | ddPCR | 47 | 0/47 | • ctDNA status after CRT Associated with primary tumour response by mrTRG ( • MFS significantly shorter in ctDNA-positive patients after completing CRT (HR 7.1; |
| Zhou et al. 2020 [ | II–III | NGS (Targeted capture sequencing) | 106 | 0/106 | • Pre-operative ctDNA-positive rate significantly lower in: patients with better pathologic tumour regression grade (ypCAP 0–1 vs ypCAP 2–3; • ctDNA positivity at every timepoint after the start of neoadjuvant treatment is associated to shorter MFS ( |
| Wang et al. 2021 [ | II–III | NGS (Targeted capture sequencing) | 119 | 0/119 | • ctDNA clearance after CRT associated with a low probability of non-pCR (OR = 0.11, • Incorporation of ctDNA and mrTRG after CRT exhibits high performance in predicting pCR (AUC = 0.886). • ctDNA-positive pts display a worse RFS after surgery (HR = 9.29; |
| Murahashi et al. 2020 [ | II–III | Amplicon-based deep sequencing | 85 | 0/85 | • Change in ctDNA predicts pCR after pre-operative therapy ( • Post-operative ctDNA detection predicts recurrence ( |
| (C) | |||||
| Cremolini et al. 2018 [ | IV | ddPCR and Ion Torrent S5 XL | 28 | 22/6 | • No • |
| Martinelli et al. 2021 [ | IV | Idylla qPCR | 77 | 52/25 | • • mPFS was 4.1 months (95% CI, 2.9–5.2 months) in |
| Sartore-Bianchi et al. 2021 [ | IV | ddPCR | 27 | 22/5 | • Among pts with |
N.° number; pts. patients, RFS relpase-free survival, OS overall survival, HR hazard ratio, ctDNA circulating tumour DNA, RFI relapse-free interval, CRC colorectal cancer, PCR polymerase chain reaction, ddPCR droplet-digital PCR, PPV predictive positive value, DFS disease free survival, DFI disease-free interval, MSI microsatellite instability, T primary tumour stage according to TNM classification, N lymph-nodes status according to TNM classification, RFS recurrence-free survival, NGS next-generation sequencing, CRT chemoradiation therapy, pCR pathological complete response, ypCAP post chemoradiation outcome according to the College of American Pathologists system, MFS metastasis-free survival, mrTRG tumour regression grade assessed by magnetic resonance, wt wild-type, AUC area under the curve, PR partial response, PFS progression-free survival, mOS median overall survival, mPFS median progression-free survival, ECD ectodomain, RR response rate, DCR disease control rate.
Main ongoing clinical trials (N = 21) investigating the role of interventional circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) to drive treatment decision-making in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients according to different clinical settings, suggesting potential future applications and developments.
| Study | Trial design | Estimated enrolment (N pts) | Main characteristics and inclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|---|
PEGASUS (NCT04259944) Italy–Spain | Phase IIa Recruiting | 140 LUNAR1 panel | • Resected stage III or T4N0 stage II colon cancer • ctDNA-guided adjuvant treatment: initially those ctDNA-positive will receive CAPOX while those negative capecitabine monotherapy; following treatment will be tailored on following ctDNA reassessment |
OPTIMIZE (NCT04680260) Denmark | Randomised Phase II Not yet recruiting | 350 NA | • Radical intended treatment for metastatic CRC with no evidence of further disease • Clinically eligible for adjuvant chemotherapy • ctDNA-guided post-surgical treatment |
DYNAMIC-II (ACTRN12615000381 583) Australia | Phase III Recruiting | 450 NA | • Resected stage II CRC • Pts will be randomly assigned to ctDNA treatment-guided group or not, and to those ctDNA-positive 5-FU will be given while to ctDNA-negative will be followed up |
DYNAMIC-III trial (ACTRN12617001566325) Australia | Randomised Phase II/III | 1000 NA | • Resected stage III colon cancer • ctDNA-negative pts in experimental arm will be de-escalated adjuvant treatment strategy and those ctDNA-positive will be escalated adjuvant treatment strategy; control will be treated as per SoC |
MEDOCC-CrEATE (NL6281/NTR6455) Netherlands | Randomised TwiCs design Recruiting | 1320 NGS PGDx elio panel | • Stage II colon cancer pts without indication for adjuvant treatment according to current guidelines • ctDNA-positive pts will be offered 8 cycles of adjuvant capecitabine plus oxaliplatin while ctDNA-negative pts and control group will be followed up |
COBRA (NCT04068103 and NRG-GI005) USA | Phase II/III Recruiting | 1408 LUNAR panel | • Stage IIA resected CRC • Pts in experimental arm II will receive adjuvant treatment (at investigator choice) if ctDNA-positive and surveillance if ctDNA-negative |
IMPROVE-IT (NCT03748680) Denmark | Phase II randomised Recruiting | 64 NA | • Stage I or II disease radically resected • Detectable ctDNA in post-operative plasma sample • No indication for adjuvant chemotherapy according to DCCG guidelines but standard adjuvant chemotherapy administered if ctDNA-positive |
(NCT03436563) USA | Phase Ib/II Recruiting | 74 NA | • Pts with detectable ctDNA following resection of all known liver metastases will receive treatment with an anti-PD-L1/TGFbetaRII Fusion Protein M7824 • Resected MSS metastatic CRC |
ALTAIR (NCT04457297) Japan | Phase III Recruiting | 240 Signatera panel | • Pts who undergone radical curative resection of the primary and metastatic tumours • Pts tested positive for ctDNA but with no evidence of disease at imaging will receive TAS-102 or placebo |
VEGA (jRCT1031200006) Japan | Phase III Recruiting | 1240 NA | • High‐risk stage II or low‐risk stage III (T1‐3 and N1) CRC, and ctDNA‐negative status at week 4 after surgery • Randomisation between surgery alone versus adjuvant CAPOX |
BESPOKE (NCT04264702) USA | NA Recruiting | 2000 Signatera panel | • Resected stage II or III colorectal cancer (CRC) • Pts may be recommended for adjuvant treatment or observation by their treating clinician |
SYNCOPE (NCT04842006) Finland | Randomised Not yet recruiting | 93 NA | • LARC randomised to receive TNT using capecitabine/oxaliplatin and SCRT vs long course CRT using capecitabine • ctDNA and organoid-guided adjuvant therapy as experimental arm compared to SoC • Assessment of MRD after surgery and correlation with prognosis |
(NCT03844620) USA | Phase II Recruiting | 100 NA | • Pts clinically eligible for either regorafenib or trifluridin-tipiracil • Pts will continue treatment beyond 1st cycle depending on ctDNA results |
(NCT04831528) China | Phase II Not yet recruiting | 100 NA | • Pts must have failed after first-line treatment containing cetuximab • Individualised second-line targeted therapy based on ctDNA analysis |
FOLICOLOR (NCT04735900) International | NA Recruiting | 60 NPY Methylation | • Unresectable metastatic disease • Identification of PD by NPY Methylation in liquid biopsies • To assess response and progression to first-line FOLFOX/FOLFIRI treatment on liquid biopsy |
NCT04509635 China | Phase III Not yet recruiting | 50 NA | • • Non-resectable liver metastases candidate to anti-EGFR rechallenge based on ctDNA results |
LIBImAb (NCT04776655) Italy | Phase III Not yet recruiting | 280 | • • To compare di efficacy of FOLFIRI + Cetuximab or Bevacizumab in tissue wt but liquid mutant |
NCT04224415 China | Phase II Not yet recruiting | 35 | • First-line therapy of FOLFOX/FOLFIRI/FOLFOXIRI + Cetuximab effectively and the PFS is not less than 6 months • ≥4 months after the last time treated with Cetuximab • |
PARERE (NCT04787341) Italy | Phase II Recruiting | 214 IdyllaTM ct | • • • Previous first-line anti-EGFR-containing therapy with at least a PR or SD ≥ 6 months; ≥4 months elapsed between the end of first-line anti-EGFR administration and screening; ≥1 line of therapy between the end of first-line anti-EGFR administration and screening |
NCT04775862 Saudi Arabia | Phase II Recruiting | 60 | • Baseline must be • • Tumour burden with <4 organ involvement |
NCT03992456 USA | Phase II Recruiting | 120 Guardant360 assay | • • PD after treatment with an anti-EGFR monoclonal antibody for at least 4 months • ≥ 90 days from the last anti-EGFR treatment • |
These studies were retrieved through an extensive search performed on ClinicalTrial.gov in October 2021. The Medical Subject Headings terms used were (“Colo-rectal Cancer” as condition/disease) and (“circulating tumor dna” as other terms).
ctDNA circulating tumour DNA, N number, pts patients, NA not available, CRC colorectal cancer, CAPOX capecitabine plus oxaliplatin, NGS next-generation sequencing, 5-FU 5-fluorouracil, SoC standard of care, DCCG Dutch Colorectal Cancer Group, LARC locally advanced rectal cancer, SCRT short course radiotherapy, CRT chemoradiotherapy, MRD minimal residual disease, FOLFOX 5-fluorouracil plus oxaliplatin, TNT total neoadjuvant treatment, cCR clinical complete response, PD progressive disease, MSS microsatellite stable, NPY Neuropeptide Y, wt wild-type.
aMatched historical control 1:3 with TOSCA trial patients.
Fig. 2Tumour clones change consequently to drug-selective pressure.
Specifically, mutated RAS mutant clones dynamically evolve in response to pulsatile EGFR-specific antibody administration in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients. In the upper panel, the dynamic of RAS altered clones retrospectively monitored through circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) of a mCRC patient ONCG-CRC69 (a)—adapted from Siravegna et al. Nat Med, 2015. Each treatment received by this patient are indicated. Grēy bars represent tumour load change during treatments. Tumour load was calculated as percentage change based on measurable disease at baseline assumed as 100%. Dotted blue line indicates changes in CEA values (ng/ml). Treatment outcome are reported according to RECIST criteria. Red lines indicate the frequency of RAS mutation (percentage of alleles) detected in circulating free DNA. In the bottom panel, a schematic representation CHRONOS clinical trial design (b). The CHRONOS trial is the first phase II trial prospectively aiming to assess the role of interventional ctDNA assessment to molecularly select mCRC patients towards rechallenge with anti-EGFR monotherapy. In this trial, mCRC patients RAS, BRAF and EGFR ectodomain wild-type on ctDNA received panitumumab monotherapy up to disease progression or toxicity. Finally, in this trial all enrolled patients are periodically and prospectively followed up for ctDNA collection to be retrospectively analysed to derive further exploratory translational data. Keys: CEA carcinoembryonic antigen.