Frontiers in Oncology (Jun 2022)

A Pilot, Prospective, Observational Study to Investigate the Value of NGS in Liquid Biopsies to Predict Tumor Response After Neoadjuvant Chemo-Radiotherapy in Patients With Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer: The LiBReCa Study

  • Raffaello Roesel,
  • Samantha Epistolio,
  • Francesca Molinari,
  • Piercarlo Saletti,
  • Piercarlo Saletti,
  • Piercarlo Saletti,
  • Sara De Dosso,
  • Sara De Dosso,
  • Mariacarla Valli,
  • Alessandra Franzetti-Pellanda,
  • Letizia Deantonio,
  • Letizia Deantonio,
  • Maira Biggiogero,
  • Paolo Spina,
  • Paolo Spina,
  • Sotirios Georgios Popeskou,
  • Alessandra Cristaudi,
  • Francesco Mongelli,
  • Luca Mazzucchelli,
  • Luca Mazzucchelli,
  • Federico Mattia Stefanini,
  • Milo Frattini,
  • Dimitri Christoforidis,
  • Dimitri Christoforidis,
  • Dimitri Christoforidis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.900945
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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IntroductionCirculating tumor DNA (ctDNA) correlates with the response to therapy in different types of cancer. However, in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC), little is known about how ctDNA levels change with neoadjuvant chemoradiation (Na-ChRT) and how they correlate with treatment response. This work aimed to explore the value of serial liquid biopsies in monitoring response after Na-ChRT with the hypothesis that this could become a reliable biomarker to identify patients with a complete response, candidates for non-operative management.Materials and MethodsTwenty-five consecutive LARC patients undergoing long-term Na-ChRT therapy were included. Applying next-generation sequencing (NGS), we characterized DNA extracted from formalin-fixed paraffin embedded diagnostic biopsy and resection tissue and plasma ctDNA collected at the following time points: the first and last days of radiotherapy (T0, Tend), at 4 (T4), 7 (T7) weeks after radiotherapy, on the day of surgery (Top), and 3–7 days after surgery (Tpost-op). On the day of surgery, a mesenteric vein sample was also collected (TIMV). The relationship between the ctDNA at those time-points and the tumor regression grade (TRG) of the surgical specimen was statistically explored.ResultsWe found no association between the disappearance of ctDNA mutations in plasma samples and pathological complete response (TRG1) as ctDNA was undetectable in the majority of patients from Tend on. However, we observed that the poor (TRG 4) response to Na-ChRT was significantly associated with a positive liquid biopsy at the Top.ConclusionsctDNA evaluation by NGS technology may identify LARC patients with poor response to Na-ChRT. In contrast, this technique does not seem useful for identifying patients prone to developing a complete response.

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