Journal of Hematology & Oncology (Nov 2018)

Clinical utility of tumor genomic profiling in patients with high plasma circulating tumor DNA burden or metabolically active tumors

  • Cathy Zhou,
  • Zilong Yuan,
  • Weijie Ma,
  • Lihong Qi,
  • Angelique Mahavongtrakul,
  • Ying Li,
  • Hong Li,
  • Jay Gong,
  • Reggie R. Fan,
  • Jin Li,
  • Michael Molmen,
  • Travis A. Clark,
  • Dean Pavlick,
  • Garrett M. Frampton,
  • Brady Forcier,
  • Elizabeth H. Moore,
  • David K. Shelton,
  • Matthew Cooke,
  • Siraj M. Ali,
  • Vincent A. Miller,
  • Jeffrey P. Gregg,
  • Philip J. Stephens,
  • Tianhong Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13045-018-0671-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Background This retrospective study was undertaken to determine if the plasma circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) level and tumor biological features in patients with advanced solid tumors affected the detection of genomic alterations (GAs) by a plasma ctDNA assay. Method Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) extracted from frozen plasma (N = 35) or fresh whole blood (N = 90) samples were subjected to a 62-gene hybrid capture-based next-generation sequencing assay FoundationACT. Concordance was analyzed for 51 matched FoundationACT and FoundationOne (tissue) cases. The maximum somatic allele frequency (MSAF) was used to estimate the amount of tumor fraction of cfDNA in each sample. The detection of GAs was correlated with the amount of cfDNA, MSAF, total tumor anatomic burden (dimensional sum), and total tumor metabolic burden (SUVmax sum) of the largest ten tumor lesions on PET/CT scans. Results FoundationACT detected GAs in 69 of 81 (85%) cases with MSAF > 0. Forty-two of 51 (82%) cases had ≥ 1 concordance GAs matched with FoundationOne, and 22 (52%) matched to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN)-recommended molecular targets. FoundationACT also detected 8 unique molecular targets, which changed the therapy in 7 (88%) patients who did not have tumor rebiopsy or sufficient tumor DNA for genomic profiling assay. In all samples (N = 81), GAs were detected in plasma cfDNA from cancer patients with high MSAF quantity (P = 0.0006) or high tumor metabolic burden (P = 0.0006) regardless of cfDNA quantity (P = 0.2362). Conclusion This study supports the utility of using plasma-based genomic assays in cancer patients with high plasma MSAF level or high tumor metabolic burden.

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