Molecular Oncology (Nov 2024)
Cell‐free DNA from ascites identifies clinically relevant variants and tumour evolution in patients with advanced ovarian cancer
Abstract
The emergence of targeted therapies has transformed ovarian cancer treatment. However, biomarker profiling for precision medicine is limited by access to quality, tumour‐enriched tissue samples. The use of cell‐free DNA (cfDNA) in ascites presents a potential solution to this challenge. In this study, next‐generation sequencing was performed on ascites‐derived cfDNA samples (26 samples from 15 human participants with ovarian cancer), with matched DNA from ascites‐derived tumour cells (n = 5) and archived formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded (FFPE) tissue (n = 5). Similar tumour purity and variant detection were achieved with cfDNA compared to FFPE and ascites cell DNA. Analysis of large‐scale genomic alterations, loss of heterozygosity and tumour mutation burden identified six cases of high genomic instability (including four with pathogenic BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations). Copy number profiles and subclone prevalence changed between sequential ascites samples, particularly in a case where deletions and chromothripsis in Chr17p13.1 and Chr8q resulted in changes in clinically relevant TP53 and MYC variants over time. Ascites cfDNA identified clinically actionable information, concordant to tissue biopsies, enabling opportunistic molecular profiling. This advocates for analysis of ascites cfDNA in lieu of accessing tumour tissue via biopsy.
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