Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy (Jul 2021)

The molecular tumor burden index as a response evaluation criterion in breast cancer

  • Zongbi Yi,
  • Fei Ma,
  • Guohua Rong,
  • Binliang Liu,
  • Yanfang Guan,
  • Jin Li,
  • Xiaoying Sun,
  • Wenna Wang,
  • Xiuwen Guan,
  • Hongnan Mo,
  • Jiani Wang,
  • Haili Qian,
  • Binghe Xu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-021-00662-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is a potential biomarker of prognosis and therapeutic response. We conducted this study to explore the role of the molecular tumor burden index (mTBI) in ctDNA as a therapeutic response and prognostic biomarker in a larger cohort prospective phase III randomized multicenter study. We collected 291 plasma samples from 125 metastatic breast cancer patients from the CAMELLIA study (NCT01917279). Target-capture deep sequencing of 1021 genes was performed to detect somatic variants in ctDNA from the plasma samples. The pretreatment mTBI value was correlated with tumor burden (P = 0.025). Patients with high-level pretreatment mTBI had shorter overall survival than patients with low-level pretreatment mTBI, and the median overall survival was 40.9 months and 68.4 months, respectively (P = 0.011). Patients with mTBI decrease to less than 0.02% at the first tumor evaluation had longer progression-free survival and overall survival (P < 0.001 and P = 0.007, respectively). The mTBI has good sensitivity to identify complete response/partial response and progressive disease based on computed tomography scans (88.5% and 87.5%, respectively). The patients classified as molecular responders had longer progression-free survival and overall survival than the nonmolecular responders in the overall cohort (P < 0.001 and P = 0.036, respectively), as well as in the cohort in which computed tomography scans were defined as representing stable disease (P = 0.027 and P = 0.015, respectively). The mTBI in ctDNA detected in liquid biopsies is a potential biomarker of therapeutic response and prognosis in patients with metastatic breast cancer.