A retrospective study of circulating tumor DNA for minimal residual disease detection in the management of colorectal cancer.

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY(2023)

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摘要
227 Background: Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) consists of small fragments of DNA released into the plasma from cancer cells. Tumor informed ctDNA testing by whole exome sequencing of the primary tumor coupled with multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based next generation sequencing of cell free DNA in serum, can detect and quantify ctDNA, allowing for detection of minimal residual disease (MRD). Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of 120 patients with colorectal cancer who had at least one tumor-informed ctDNA MRD assay completed between May 6, 2019, and July 1, 2022, at Mayo Clinic, Rochester. Disease recurrence was defined as radiographic evidence consistent with recurrence with or without biopsy confirmation. Data are presented descriptively, including number of ctDNA assays completed, ctDNA positivity prior to disease recurrence, and ctDNA concordance with carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). The study protocol was exempt after review by the Mayo Clinic Institutional Review Board. Results: One-hundred twenty patients were included in the study with median age at initial disease diagnosis of 67.0 years. Sixty-four percent were male and 94% were white. At time of initial diagnosis, 10 had stage I, 23 stage II, 60 stage III, and 25 stage IV disease. In 120 patients, 476 ctDNA assays were performed, and 110 recurrences were observed among 62 patients. There were 39 instances in which ctDNA was obtained prior to clinical detection of recurrence and of these, at least one ctDNA assay was positive in 28 cases (72%). CEA was obtained prior to recurrence in 88 instances and was elevated in only 39 cases (44%). Among 37 instances where both ctDNA and CEA testing were obtained prior to recurrence, ctDNA was positive in 27 cases (73%) while CEA was positive in 14 cases (38%). ctDNA was positive in 83% of recurrences involving liver and 62.5% of recurrences involving only the lungs. ctDNA and CEA positivity are shown by location of recurrence. ctDNA and CEA were discordant in 44% of instances in which the assays were completed within 2-weeks of each other. Results of a ctDNA assay impacted management decisions in 16% of cases. Conclusions: ctDNA detected 72% of recurrences with higher rates of detection in liver versus lung metastasis. ctDNA performed superiorly to serum CEA in detection of recurrence, suggesting a role in disease surveillance. However, ctDNA impacted disease management in only 16% of patients, suggesting need for better patient selection and further study for ctDNA-based disease management strategy (more details will be reported). [Table: see text]
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关键词
tumor dna,colorectal cancer,minimal residual disease detection
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