| Literature DB >> 35525184 |
M Benavides1, J Alcaide-Garcia2, E Torres1, S Gil-Calle1, I Sevilla1, R Wolman3, G Durán4, M Álvarez5, C Reyna-Fortes1, I Ales1, T Pereda6, M Robles7, M Kushnir8, J Odegaard8, I Faull8, E Alba9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Comprehensive biomarker testing is essential in selecting optimal treatment for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC); however, incomplete genotyping is widespread, with most patients not receiving testing for all guideline-recommended biomarkers, in part due to reliance on burdensome sequential tissue-based single-biomarker tests with long waiting times or availability of only archival tissue samples. We aimed to demonstrate that liquid biopsy, associated with rapid turnaround time (TAT) and lower patient burden, effectively identifies guideline-recommended biomarkers in mCRC relative to standard of care (SOC) tissue testing. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Prospectively enrolled patients with previously untreated mCRC undergoing physician discretion SOC tissue genotyping submitted pretreatment blood samples for comprehensive circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis with Guardant360 and targeted RAS and BRAF analysis with OncoBEAM.Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; circulating tumor DNA; genomic profiling; liquid biopsy; metastatic colorectal cancer; next-generation sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35525184 PMCID: PMC9271474 DOI: 10.1016/j.esmoop.2022.100481
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ESMO Open ISSN: 2059-7029
Figure 1Patient accountability. ctDNA, circulating tumor DNA.
Figure 2Biomarker discovery rate and turnaround time (TAT). (A) Biomarker discovery rate. Percent of total study patients with at least one guideline-recommended biomarker. (B) Relationship of patients positive by SOC tissue and comprehensive ctDNA testing. (C) Hypothetical sequencing of both orders of serial testing. Percent is out of total biomarker-positive patients identified. (D) Cumulative biomarker discovery rate as a function of time from sample collection to test result. (E) SOC tissue genotyping completion rate by biomarker. BRAF is BRAF V600E. ‘All’ includes RAS, BRAF V600E, and MSI status. (F) Clinical performance summary statistics for each testing method using the other as the comparator. Primary analysis population, all 155 patients on study; secondary analysis population, patients with valid results on both tests and tissue taken at stage IV. BDR, biomarker discovery rate; ctDNA, circulating tumor DNA; MSI, microsatellite instability; NGS, next-generation sequencing; NPA, negative percent agreement; OPA, overall percent agreement; PPA, positive percent agreement; SOC, standard of care.
Guideline-recommended biomarker status by comprehensive ctDNA and SOC tissue testing
| Tissue | ctDNA to tissue, % | Tissue to ctDNA, % | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | Negative | Total | PPA | 87.8 | 81.8 | ||
| ctDNA | Positive | 72 | 16 | 88 | PPV | 81.8 | 87.8 |
| Negative | 10 | 57 | 67 | NPA | 78.1 | 85.1 | |
| Total | 82 | 73 | 155 | NPV | 85.1 | 78.1 | |
| OPA | 83.2 | 83.2 | |||||
Biomarkers included are KRAS SNVs, NRAS SNVs, BRAF V600E, MSI-H, and ERBB2 CNVs.
ctDNA, circulating tumor DNA; NPA, negative percent agreement; MSI, microsatellite instability; NPV, negative predictive value; OPA, overall percent agreement; PPA, positive percent agreement; PPV, positive predictive value; SNV, single-nucleotide variant; SOC, standard of care.
Samples that were negative, in which testing failed, which had no detectable tumor, or were not assessed for all biomarkers of interest are classified as ‘negative’.
Secondary analysis population excludes samples in which testing failed, which had no detectable tumor, were not assessed for biomarkers of interest (N = 12), or samples where tissue was taken >20 days prior to stage IV diagnosis (N = 25).
Figure 3Biomarker identity and concordance between comprehensive ctDNA and SOC tissue testing. (A) Biomarkers identified by comprehensive ctDNA and SOC tissue testing. (B) Clinical performance summary statistics for each test method using the other as the comparator for each biomarker. BRAF is BRAF V600E. (C) Concordance between test methods per biomarker. (D) Correlation between variant allelic fractions (VAFs) as determined by comprehensive ctDNA NGS and limited ctDNA PCR testing for KRAS.ctDNA, circulating tumor DNA; NGS, next-generation sequencing; SOC, standard of care.
Figure 4Clinical correlates of ctDNA. (A) Biomarker discovery rate for tissue and comprehensive ctDNA testing by primary tumor location. (B) Maximum variant allelic fraction (VAF) by primary tumor location. (C) Biomarker prevalence by metastases in liver, lung, and peritoneum. (D) Maximum VAF by presence versus absence of metastases at site. (E) Maximum VAF by metastatic site with all metastatic site combinations represented. There were no patients without metastasis in at least one of the aforementioned sites.ctDNA, circulating tumor DNA.