Molecular Cancer (May 2024)

Minimal residual disease profiling predicts pathological complete response in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma

  • Pinli Yue,
  • Fenglong Bie,
  • Jiarun Zhu,
  • Lin-Rui Gao,
  • Zhendiao Zhou,
  • Guangyu Bai,
  • Xiaobing Wang,
  • Ziyi Zhao,
  • Ze-Fen Xiao,
  • Yong Li,
  • Aiping Zhou,
  • Wen-Yang Liu,
  • Yuchen Jiao,
  • Shugeng Gao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12943-024-02006-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Accurate presurgical prediction of pathological complete response (pCR) can guide treatment decisions, potentially avoiding unnecessary surgeries and improving the quality of life for cancer patients. We developed a minimal residual disease (MRD) profiling approach with enhanced sensitivity and specificity for detecting minimal tumor DNA from cell-free DNA (cfDNA). The approach was validated in two independent esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) cohorts. In a cohort undergoing neoadjuvant, surgical, and adjuvant therapy (NAT cohort), presurgical MRD status precisely predicted pCR. All MRD-negative cases (10/10) were confirmed as pCR by pathological evaluation on the resected tissues. In contrast, MRD-positive cases included all the 27 non-pCR cases and only one pCR case (10/10 vs 1/28, P < 0.0001, Fisher’s exact test). In a definitive radiotherapy cohort (dRT cohort), post-dRT MRD status was closely correlated with patient prognosis. All MRD-negative patients (25/25) remained progression-free during the follow-up period, while 23 of the 26 MRD-positive patients experienced disease progression (25/25 vs 3/26, P < 0.0001, Fisher’s exact test; progression-free survival, P < 0.0001, log-rank test). The MRD profiling approach effectively predicted the ESCC patients who would achieve pCR with surgery and those likely to remain progression-free without surgery. This suggests that the cancer cells in these MRD-negative patients have been effectively eliminated and they could be suitable candidates for a watch-and-wait strategy, potentially avoiding unnecessary surgery.

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