| Literature DB >> 35805046 |
Hiu Ting Chan1, Yoon Ming Chin1,2, Siew-Kee Low1.
Abstract
Genomic profiling using tumor biopsies remains the standard approach for the selection of approved molecular targeted therapies. However, this is often limited by its invasiveness, feasibility, and poor sample quality. Liquid biopsies provide a less invasive approach while capturing a contemporaneous and comprehensive tumor genomic profile. Recent advancements in the detection of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) from plasma samples at satisfactory sensitivity, specificity, and detection concordance to tumor tissues have facilitated the approval of ctDNA-based genomic profiling to be integrated into regular clinical practice. The recent approval of both single-gene and multigene assays to detect genetic biomarkers from plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA) as companion diagnostic tools for molecular targeted therapies has transformed the therapeutic decision-making procedure for advanced solid tumors. Despite the increasing use of cfDNA-based molecular profiling, there is an ongoing debate about a 'plasma first' or 'tissue first' approach toward genomic testing for advanced solid malignancies. Both approaches present possible advantages and disadvantages, and these factors should be carefully considered to personalize and select the most appropriate genomic assay. This review focuses on the recent advancements of cfDNA-based genomic profiling assays in advanced solid tumors while highlighting the major challenges that should be tackled to formulate evidence-based guidelines in recommending the 'right assay for the right patient at the right time'.Entities:
Keywords: actionable alterations; circulating tumor DNA; genomic biomarkers; liquid biopsy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35805046 PMCID: PMC9265547 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14133275
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1Advantages and disadvantages of tumor genomic profiling using tumor tissues and plasma cfDNA.
Common ctDNA detection platforms.
| Method | Name | Example | Number of Targets | LOD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCR-based | qPCR | COLD-PCR | 1 | 0.1–1% |
| dPCR | BEAMing | 1–20 targets | 0.01–0.1% | |
| dPCR | ddPCR | up to 5 targets | 0.01–0.1% | |
| MassSpec PCR | UltraSeek | Multigenes | 0.1–1% | |
| NGS-based | Amplicon-based | IonTorrent-Oncomine | Multigenes | 0.1% |
| Safe-SeqS; Plasma-SeqSensei | Multigenes | 0.04–0.2% | ||
| Hybrid capture | Avenio, TruSight 500 | Multigenes | 0.5% | |
| CAPP-Seq; Guardant360; FoundationOne Liquid | Multigenes | 0.02% |
PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction; ddPCR: droplet digital PCR; qPCR: quantitative PCR; NGS: Next-generation sequencing; COLD-PCR: Co-amplification at lower denaturation temperature PCR; BEAMing: Beads, emulsion, amplification, magnetics; LOD: Limit of detection.
Summary of recently published studies on the mutation detection concordance between tumor tissues and ctDNA.
| Cancer Type | Sample Size | Method | Number of Genes | Types of Variants | Detection Rate | Detection of Actionable Mutations from ctDNA | CH Elimination | Tissue Plasma Concordance * | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pan Cancer | 11,525 | Customized hybridization capture NGS | 1021 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion, bTMB | 73.50% | 41.2% | Yes | N.D | [ | |
| Pan Cancer | 681 | MSK-ACCESS hybridization capture NGS | 129 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion, bTMB | 73% | 56.0% | Yes | 59.0% | Variable collection interval between tissue and plasma | [ |
| Pan Cancer | 433 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 37% | N.D. | No | 45.0% | Only examined TP53; variable collection interval between tissue and plasma | [ |
| Pan Cancer | 161 | Customized hybridization capture NGS (GRAIL) | 508 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 84% | N.D. | Yes | 72.0% | [ | |
| Pan Cancer | 10,593 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 86% | 72.0% | No | 92.0% | Concordance based on 543 patients, in 7 genes | [ |
| Lung | 1971 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 87.30% | 26.70% | No | N.D. | [ | |
| Lung | 262 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 60.40% | 60.40% | No | 67.70% | Initial diagnosis/treatment naïve; only examined 6 genes ( | [ |
| Lung | 934 | FoundationLiquid/FoundationACT NGS | 62/70 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 90.00% | 20.00% | No | N.D. | ctDNA: 937 patients; Tissue: 5582 patients | [ |
| Lung | 8388 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 86.00% | 48.00% | No | N.D. | [ | |
| Lung | 282 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS/ddPCR | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | - | 27.30% | No | 80.0% | [ | |
| Lung | 127 | Customized hybridization capture NGS (GRAIL) | 37 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | - | - | Yes | 75.0% | [ | |
| Lung | 210 | ResBio ctDx-Lung amplicon-based NGS | 21 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 64.30% | 21.90% | No | 60.6% | A subset of patients subjected to treatment at the time of plasma collection | [ |
| Lung | 323 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | - | 33.00% | No | N.D. | [ | |
| Breast | 162 | Customized amplicon-based NGS | 39 | SNVs | 92.50% | 39.00% | No | N.D. | [ | |
| Breast | 1044 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS/ddPCR | ddPCR: 4; NGS: 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 51.10% | 34.50% | No | 93% | Concordance is based on 77 patients in 4 genes ( | [ |
| Breast | 255 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 89.00% | 26.00% | No | 79–91% | Actionable alterations in | [ |
| Gastrointestinal | 1687 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 91.40% | 57.30% | No | 8.3–80.3% | Concordance is based on 287 patients | [ |
| Gastrointestinal | 200 | Customized amplicon-based NGS | 150 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion, bTMB, bMSI | 84.05% | 45.50% | No | N.D. | [ | |
| Gastrointestinal | 1064 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 93.70% | 47.70% | No | N.D. | Only included metastatic colorectal cancer patients | [ |
| Gastrointestinal | 282 | Guardant 360 hybridization capture NGS | 73 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 75.00% | 48.00% | No | 50–86% | [ | |
| Prostate | 3334 | FoundationLiquid/FoundationACT NGS | 62/70 | SNVs, Indels, CNVs, Fusion | 79.50% | 30% (DDR gene alteration) | Yes | 75.3% (SNVs); 70.3% (rearrangements); 27.5% (CNVs) | DDR alterations: | [ |
* % of mutations detected from tumor tissues also detected from plasma cfDNA, unless stated. CH: clonal hematopoiesis; ddPCR: droplet digital PCR; N.D.: not determined; SNVs: single nucleotide variants; CNVs: copy number variations; bTMB: blood tumor mutation burden; DDR: DNA damage response and repair; MSI-H: microsatellite instability high.
Summary of FDA-approved diagnostic plasma ctDNA assays.
| Approved Diagnostic Tool | Technology | Number of Genes | Input (ng) | Disease | Drug | Biomarker | LOD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cobas EGFR | RT-PCR | 1 | Undefined; (2 mL of plasma) | NSCLC | Erlotinib & Gefitinib | Exon 19 deletions: 0.1–0.5%; L858R: 0.4–0.8% | |
| Osimertinib | Exon 19 deletions: 0.1–0.5%; L858R: 0.4–0.8%; | ||||||
| Therascreen | RQT-PCR | 1 | Undefined; (2 mL of plasma) | Breast | Alpelisib | 1.82–7.07% | |
| FoundationOne Liquid CDx | NGS-hybridization enrichment | 324 (311 FDA approved) | 20 | NSCLC | Alectinib | ||
| Osimertinib & Erlotinib | Exon 19 deletions: 0.27%; L858R: 0.34% | ||||||
| Capmatinib | Substitutions: 0.4%; | ||||||
| Prostate | Olaparib |
| Substitutions: 0.34%; | ||||
|
| Substitutions: 0.37%; | ||||||
| Indels: 0.51% | |||||||
| Rucaparib |
| Substitutions: 0.34%; | |||||
|
| Substitutions: 0.37%; | ||||||
| Ovarian | Rucaparib |
| Substitutions: 0.34%; | ||||
|
| Substitutions: 0.37%; | ||||||
| Breast | Alpelisib | Substitutions: 0.34% | |||||
| Guardant360 CDx | NGS- hybridization enrichment | 74 (55 FDA approved) | 30 | NSCLC | Osimertinib | 0.20% | |
| Amivantamab-vmjw | 0.30% | ||||||
| Sotorasib | 0.50% |
Figure 2Generalized guidelines for CGP assay selection under different clinical situations. The schema was devised based on recommended guidelines from NCCN, ESMO, ASCO and IASLC together with existing literature. Patients with advanced solid tumors with known FDA-approved targeted therapies should undergo tissue-based genomic profiling for treatment selection. In cases where biopsy and tumor tissues are insufficient or unfeasible, patients present with multiple lesions or patients with aggressive, fast-progression cancers, cfDNA-based genomic profiling should be considered. CGP using cfDNA-based assays should be considered the assay of choice for patients who have developed recurrence or disease progression after targeted therapies. However, for patients with cancer types known to be low shedding of ctDNA and with contemporary tissues available, a tissue-based assay should be preferred. Patients with negative ctDNA results should reflex to tissue testing in all cases.