scholarly journals Patient choice and clinical outcomes following positive noninvasive prenatal screening for aneuploidy with cell-free DNA (cfDNA)

2016 ◽  
Vol 36 (5) ◽  
pp. 456-462 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lori J. Dobson ◽  
Emily S. Reiff ◽  
Sarah E. Little ◽  
Louise Wilkins-Haug ◽  
Bryann Bromley







2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herman Hedriana ◽  
Kimberly Martin ◽  
Daniel Saltzman ◽  
Paul Billings ◽  
Zachary Demko ◽  
...  


2018 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Nshimyumukiza ◽  
S. Menon ◽  
H. Hina ◽  
F. Rousseau ◽  
D. Reinharz


2018 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 1490-1496 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karin Huijsdens-van Amsterdam ◽  
Lieve Page-Christiaens ◽  
Nicola Flowers ◽  
Michael D Bonifacio ◽  
Katie M Battese Ellis ◽  
...  


Author(s):  
Amber Mathiesen ◽  
Kali Roy

This chapter provides information about a genetic counselor’s role in prenatal screening, including discussing and offering options to a patient, interpreting and providing results, or managing referrals based on abnormal results. It discusses how a screen is evaluated using sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and personal utility. It provides a detailed description of both maternal serum screening and cell-free DNA testing. The maternal serum screening discussion includes information on multiples of median, calculating risk, timing, pattern association, limitations, and follow-up. The review of cell-free DNA testing includes fetal fraction, methodology, test performance, limitations and considerations for testing, and follow-up. This chapter also provides a list of additional resources to use for cell-free DNA testing.



2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (8_suppl) ◽  
pp. 103-103
Author(s):  
Nicolas Guibert ◽  
Greg Jones ◽  
John F. Beeler ◽  
Clive D. Morris ◽  
Vincent Plagnol ◽  
...  

103 Background: Tumor mutational burden is an emerging biomarker of response to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI), whose clinical adoption is challenging, especially in liquid biopsies. We hypothesized that targeting limited but relevant genetic alterations in plasma cell-free DNA with next generation sequencing (NGS) along with early monitoring may represent a non-invasive approach to predict response to ICI. Methods: Plasma samples from responders (PFS > 6 months) and non-responders (progressive disease at first evaluation) patients collected before nivolumab (second line) initiation and at 1 month were tested using tagged amplicon sequencing of hotspots and coding regions from 36 genes, blinded to clinical outcomes and tumor genotype. Molecular profile of ctDNA, and its early kinetics (1 month) were analyzed as potential early indicators of response. Results: 98 patients were analyzed, of which 86 (39 responders, 47 non-responders) were evaluable for response. Alterations in ctDNA were detectable in 67/86 baseline samples (78%). The detection of a targetable oncogenic driver (5 EGFR, 1 ALK) was associated with progressive disease on the first CT-scan The presence of a PTEN and/or STK11 mutations (b-PS(+)) was correlated with poor outcomes (median PFS 1.5 months vs. 8 months in b-PS(-)) patients, p = 0.0007), while the presence of transversion mutations in KRAS and/or TP53 (b-KP-Tv(+)) predicted good outcomes (median PFS 11 months vs. 2 months in b-KP-Tv(-) patients, p = 0.0088). Combining these results, patients with a low “immune score” (driver and/or b-PS(+) and/or b-KP-Tv(-)) derived poor outcomes (PFS 2 months), compared with patients with a high immune score (no driver, b-PS(-) and b-KP-Tv(+), PFS 14 months, p = 0.0001, HR 2.96). Studying early changes in 65 specimens, molecular response was correlated with clinical outcomes (14 months PFS in patients with early ctDNA decrease compared to 2 months in patients with increase, p < 0.0001; HR 2.7). Using cut-off of 30% and 50% of plasma response increased the ability of ctDNA to predict response (HR 4 and 4.17, respectively). Conclusions: Targeted sequencing of plasma ctDNA and its early variations can predict response to anti-PD-1. Clinical trial information: NCT02827344.



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