The Journal of Liquid Biopsy (Jun 2024)
Liquid biopsy for monitoring minimal residual disease in localized and locally-advanced non-small cell lung cancer after radical-intent treatment
Abstract
Blood-based biomarkers investigation does not require invasive tissue biopsies and may explore diverse tumoral components such as proteins, microRNAs, circulating tumor cells, ctDNA, and exosomes and may better reflect tumor molecular heterogeneity, either temporal or spatial. ctDNA is related to tumor burden and represents a more objective measure of the total body disease burden than imaging findings. ctDNA profiling can be therefore useful to determine minimal residual disease (MRD), which is defined as the remaining tumor cells or tumor-derived material after definitive treatment in patients with no clinical evidence of disease.The detection of MRD is highly predictive of future disease recurrence. Although detectable MRD is associated with a poor prognosis, it is not clear whether MRD detection can guide therapy escalation to improve patient outcomes.In this review, we present four cases of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutant NSCLC patients who received standard of care curative treatment and periodic radiological assessment and liquid biopsy analyses were carried out as follow-up.A tumor-informed 52 genes Oncomine Pan-Cancer Cell-Free assay (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA), was used to identify single-nucleotide variants (SNVs), indels, copy number variations (CNVs), and RNA fusions in blood based liquid biopsy ctDNA in three of four patients. In one patient the approach used was through Commercial Kit Cobas EGFR Mutation Test v2 CE-IVD (Roche Diagnostics SL) that identifies 42 mutations in the EGFR gene. In one patient, an actionable oncogene driver alteration was identified in the ctDNA analysis, four months after radical intent concurrent chemoradiotherapy and six weeks before radiological distant relapse was clearly confirmed. There is no evidence of ctDNA or radiological disease relapse in the other three patients.Finally, a review of the literature addressing the potential value of MRD detection in this clinical setting is presented and discussed as well.