Isaac Garcia-Murillas, Rosalind J Cutts, Giselle Walsh-Crestani, Edward Phillips, Sarah Hrebien, Kathryn Dunne, Kally Sidhu, Robert Daber, Benjamin Hubert, Chiharu Graybill, Peter M DeFord, David J Wooten, Jianhua Zhao, Rachel E Ellsworth, Stephen R D Johnston, Alistair Ring, Simon Russell, Abigail Evans, Anthony Skene, Duncan Wheatley, Ian E Smith, W Michael Korn, Nicholas C Turner
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The Invitae Personalized Cancer Monitoring™ assay (PCM) is a newly developed next-generation sequencing approach that utilizes up to 50 patient-specific, tumor-informed DNA variants, to detect circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA). The ability of the PCM assay to detect MRD before clinical relapse was evaluated.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>The cohort included 61 female patients with high-risk breast cancer who underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Plasma samples were collected before and during neoadjuvant therapy, after surgery and during monitoring. PCM was used to detect ctDNA at each time point.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>The sensitivity to detect ctDNA in plasma from patients who relapsed during the monitoring phase was 76.9% (10/13). Specificity and positive predictive values were both 100% with all (10/61, 16%) of the patients who had ctDNA detected during the monitoring phase subsequently relapsing. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的:分子残留病(MRD)的检测可识别复发风险较高的乳腺癌患者,在复发早期阶段及早开始治疗有可能改善患者的预后。Invitae Personalized Cancer Monitoring™ 分析 (PCM) 是一种新开发的下一代测序方法,利用多达 50 种患者特异性、肿瘤信息 DNA 变异来检测循环肿瘤 DNA (ctDNA)。我们评估了 PCM 检测法在临床复发前检测 MRD 的能力:研究对象包括 61 名接受新辅助化疗的高危乳腺癌女性患者。在新辅助治疗前、新辅助治疗期间、手术后和监测期间采集血浆样本。PCM 用于检测每个时间点的ctDNA:结果:在监测阶段检测复发患者血浆中 ctDNA 的灵敏度为 76.9%(10/13)。特异性和阳性预测值均为100%,所有在监测阶段检测到ctDNA的患者(10/61,16%)随后都复发了。在监测期间检测到 ctDNA 与未来复发的高风险相关(HR 37.2,95% CI 10.5-131.9,p 结论:PCM 检测到的 ctDNA 与未来复发的高风险相关(HR 37.2,95% CI 10.5-131.9,p 结论):PCM 在复发患者中检测到的 ctDNA 与无复发生存期密切相关,可用于识别高复发风险患者,以便尽早干预。
Longitudinal monitoring of circulating tumor DNA to detect relapse early and predict outcome in early breast cancer.
Purpose: Detection of molecular residual disease (MRD) allows for the identification of breast cancer patients at high-risk of recurrence, with the potential that early initiation of treatment at early stages of relapse could improve patient outcomes. The Invitae Personalized Cancer Monitoring™ assay (PCM) is a newly developed next-generation sequencing approach that utilizes up to 50 patient-specific, tumor-informed DNA variants, to detect circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA). The ability of the PCM assay to detect MRD before clinical relapse was evaluated.
Methods: The cohort included 61 female patients with high-risk breast cancer who underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Plasma samples were collected before and during neoadjuvant therapy, after surgery and during monitoring. PCM was used to detect ctDNA at each time point.
Results: The sensitivity to detect ctDNA in plasma from patients who relapsed during the monitoring phase was 76.9% (10/13). Specificity and positive predictive values were both 100% with all (10/61, 16%) of the patients who had ctDNA detected during the monitoring phase subsequently relapsing. Detection of ctDNA during monitoring was associated with a high-risk of future relapse (HR 37.2, 95% CI 10.5-131.9, p < 0.0001), with a median lead-time from ctDNA detection to clinical relapse of 11.7 months.
Conclusion: PCM detected ctDNA in patients who relapsed with a long lead-time over clinical relapse, shows strong association with relapse-free survival and may be used to identify patients at high-risk for relapse, allowing for earlier intervention.
期刊介绍:
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment provides the surgeon, radiotherapist, medical oncologist, endocrinologist, epidemiologist, immunologist or cell biologist investigating problems in breast cancer a single forum for communication. The journal creates a "market place" for breast cancer topics which cuts across all the usual lines of disciplines, providing a site for presenting pertinent investigations, and for discussing critical questions relevant to the entire field. It seeks to develop a new focus and new perspectives for all those concerned with breast cancer.