EBioMedicine (Mar 2019)

Enrichment of short mutant cell-free DNA fragments enhanced detection of pancreatic cancerResearch in context

  • Xiaoyu Liu,
  • Lingxiao Liu,
  • Yuan Ji,
  • Changyu Li,
  • Tao Wei,
  • Xuerong Yang,
  • Yuefang Zhang,
  • Xuyu Cai,
  • Yangbin Gao,
  • Weihong Xu,
  • Shengxiang Rao,
  • Dayong Jin,
  • Wenhui Lou,
  • Zilong Qiu,
  • Xiaolin Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41
pp. 345 – 356

Abstract

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Background: Analysis of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is promising for broad applications in clinical settings, but with significant bias towards late-stage cancers. Although recent studies have discussed the diverse and degraded nature of cfDNA molecules, little is known about its impact on the practice of cfDNA analysis. Methods: We developed single-strand library preparation and hybrid-capture-based cfDNA sequencing (SLHC-seq) to analysis degraded cfDNA fragments. Next we used SLHC-seq to perform cfDNA profiling in 112 pancreatic cancer patients, and the results were compared with 13 previous reports. Extensive analysis was performed in terms of cfDNA fragments to explore the reasons for higher detection rate of KRAS mutations in the circulation of pancreatic cancers. Findings: By applying the new approach, we achieved higher efficiency in analysis of mutations than previously reported using other detection assays. 791 cancer-specific mutations were detected in plasma of 88% patients with KRAS hotspots detected in 70% of all patients. Only 8 mutations were detected in 28 healthy controls without any known oncogenic or truncating alleles. cfDNA profiling by SLHC-seq was largely consistent with results of tissue-based sequencing. SLHC-seq rescued short or damaged cfDNA fragments along to increase the sensitivity and accuracy of circulating-tumour DNA detection. Interpretation: We found that the small mutant fragments are prevalent in early-stage patients, which provides strong evidence for fragment size-based detection of pancreatic cancer. The new pipeline enhanced our understanding of cfDNA biology and provide new insights for liquid biopsy. Keywords: Pancreatic cancer, Cell-free DNA, Fragmentation, Tissue biopsy, Diagnosis and prognosis