Use of Circulating Cell-Free DNA to Guide Precision Medicine in Patients with Colorectal Cancer

2021 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 399-413
Author(s):  
Van K. Morris ◽  
John H. Strickler

Patient-specific biomarkers form the foundation of precision medicine strategies. To realize the promise of precision medicine in patients with colorectal cancer (CRC), access to cost-effective, convenient, and safe assays is critical. Improvements in diagnostic technology have enabled ultrasensitive and specific assays to identify cell-free DNA (cfDNA) from a routine blood draw. Clinicians are already employing these minimally invasive assays to identify drivers of therapeutic resistance and measure genomic heterogeneity, particularly when tumor tissue is difficult to access or serial sampling is necessary. As cfDNA diagnostic technology continues to improve, more innovative applications are anticipated. In this review, we focus on four clinical applications for cfDNA analysis in the management of CRC: detecting minimal residual disease, monitoring treatment response in the metastatic setting, identifying drivers of treatment sensitivity and resistance, and guiding therapeutic strategies to overcome resistance.

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 3423-3423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lenka Kubiczkova-Besse ◽  
Daniela Drandi ◽  
Lenka Sedlarikova ◽  
Stefania Oliva ◽  
Manuela Gambella ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Circulating nucleic acids, such as cell-free DNA (cf-DNA), are becoming a promising minimally-invasive diagnostic tool for cancer detection. Recent studies demonstrated that tumor-derived cf-DNA can be used to monitor tumor burden and response to treatment in patients (pts) with solid tumors as well as hematological malignancies (Dawson et al, 2013, Armand et al, 2013). In this study we investigated the clinical utility of cf-DNA in the monitoring of minimal residual disease (MRD) of pts with multiple myeloma (MM) carrying the tumor specific immunoglobulin (IGH) rearrangement. Methods Cf-DNA was extracted from 1 ml of serum sample from 13 MM patients enrolled in Italian CRD/MEL-200 and EMN-02 protocols. The total amount of cf-DNA was estimated by fluorometric measurement (median 560 ng, range 15-5158 ng) and the length of fragments was evaluated by high sensitivity dsDNA chips (Agilent). Patient specific clonal IGH rearrangement was identified at the time of diagnosis from bone marrow (BM) genomic DNA (gDNA) as previously reported (Ladetto et al, 2000). For each patient, MRD in BM and peripheral blood (PB) was estimated by real time quantitative PCR (qPCR) using ASO-specific primers and the quantification was based on serial 10-fold dilution standard curves from plasmid carrying the patient specific IGH rearrangement. The amount of IGH rearrangement in cf-DNA (cf-IGH) was estimated by qPCR and droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) (Bio-Rad) on diagnostic and follow up samples and was expressed as the amount of copies per 1 µg of total cf-DNA. qPCR and ddPCR results were interpreted according to the Euro-MRD guidelines (van der Velden et al, 2003). Results Overall, 54 cf-DNA samples from MM serum (13 diagnostic, 41 follow-up samples) were analyzed for the presence of patient specific IGH rearrangement. The most abundant fraction of cf-DNA was 180-220bp, than 350-400bp and 700-10000bp (in 100%, 85% and 68% of samples respectively), whereas longer fragments more often appeared in follow-up samples. By qPCR, cf-IGH at diagnosis were observed in 11/13 diagnostic samples. Only 3/13 pts were quantifiable (116, 85, 187 copies/1 µg of cfDNA) and 8/13 pts were positive but not quantifiable (PNQ) cf-IGH. By ddPCR, levels of cf-IGH at diagnosis were observed in 9/13 pts. 6/13 pts were quantifiable (246, 195, 96, 88, 184, 25 copies/1µg of cfDNA), and only 3/13 pts were PNQ. In follow-up samples, levels of cf-IGH were undetectable by qRT-PCR; however in 5 samples they were PNQ by ddPCR. Interestingly, in one available relapse sample, cf-IGH reappeared again to quantifiable level (61 copies by qRT-PCR and 190 copies by ddPCR). The levels of cf-IGH are quantifiable in samples with higher amount of tumor specific IGH rearrangements in BM or PB; however, no association was observed between cf-IGH level at diagnosis and disease burden estimated by the PCs infiltration in BM or the monoclonal immunoglobulin concentration in blood/urine. Conclusions These data show the potential utility of cf-IGH monitoring in MM pts. Although by qPCR, cf-IGH were detected in 11/13 pts, they were quantifiable only in 3/13 pts and ddPCR was more precise as it was able to quantify cf-IGH in 6/13 pts. Since cf-IGH copies were quantifiable only in diagnostic samples and in 1 available sample at the relapse, we conclude that higher amounts of serum are necessary to overcome the limitation of assay sensitivity. Potential advantages and predictive value, for monitoring tumor marker in a non-invasive manner, need to be further validated on larger cohort of samples using increased amount of cf-DNA. Work was supported by IGA grants NT12130, NT14575. This work is funded by a Black Swan Research Initiative grant by the International Myeloma Foundation "Dynamics of microRNA and cell-free DNA profiles during multiple myeloma progression“. Disclosures Boccadoro: Celgene: Honoraria; Janssen: Honoraria; Onyx: Honoraria. Palumbo:Amgen: Consultancy, Honoraria; Bristol-Myers Squibb: Consultancy, Honoraria; Array BioPharma: Honoraria; Genmab A/S: Consultancy, Honoraria; Celgene: Consultancy, Honoraria; Janssen-Cilag: Consultancy, Honoraria; Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: Consultancy, Honoraria; Onyx Pharmaceuticals: Consultancy, Honoraria; Sanofi Aventis: Honoraria.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Josiah T. Wagner ◽  
Hyun Ji Kim ◽  
Katie C. Johnson-Camacho ◽  
Taylor Kelley ◽  
Laura F. Newell ◽  
...  

Abstract Many emerging technologies are reliant on circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) and cell-free RNA (cfRNA) applications in the clinic. However, the impact of diurnal cycles or daily meals on circulating analytes are poorly understood and may be confounding factors when developing diagnostic platforms. To begin addressing this knowledge gap, we obtained plasma from four healthy donors serially sampled five times during 12 h in a single day. For all samples, we measured concentrations of cfDNA and cfRNA using both bulk measurements and gene-specific digital droplet PCR. We found no significant variation attributed to blood draw number for the cfDNA or cfRNA. This indicated that natural diurnal cycles and meal consumption do not appear to significantly affect abundance of total cfDNA, total cfRNA, or our two selected cfRNA transcripts. Conversely, we observed significant variation between individual donors for cfDNA and one of the cfRNA transcripts. The results of this work suggest that it will be important to consider patient-specific baselines when designing reliable circulating cfDNA or cfRNA clinical assays.


Author(s):  
Ruben Van Paemel ◽  
Andries De Koker ◽  
Christa Caggiano ◽  
Annelien Morlion ◽  
Pieter Mestdagh ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundThe methylation pattern of cfDNA, isolated from liquid biopsies, is gaining substantial interest for diagnosis and monitoring of diseases. We have evaluated the impact of type of blood collection tube and time delay between blood draw and plasma preparation on bisulfite-based cfDNA methylation profiling.Methods15 tubes of blood were drawn from three healthy volunteer subjects (BD Vacutainer K2E EDTA spray tubes, Streck Cell-Free DNA BCT tubes, PAXgene Blood ccfDNA tubes, Roche Cell-Free DNA Collection tubes and Biomatrica LBgard blood tubes in triplicate). Samples were either immediately processed or stored at room temperature for 24 or 72 hours before plasma preparation. DNA fragment size was evaluated by capillary electrophoresis. Reduced representation bisulfite sequencing was performed on the cell-free DNA isolated from these plasma samples. We evaluated the impact of blood tube and time delay on several quality control metrics.ResultsAll preservation tubes performed similar on the quality metrics that were evaluated. Furthermore, a considerable increase in cfDNA concentration and the fraction of it derived from NK cells was observed after a 72-hour time delay in EDTA tubes.ConclusionThe methylation pattern of cfDNA is robust and reproducible in between the different preservation tubes. EDTA tubes processed as soon as possible, preferably within 24 hours, are the most cost effective. If immediate processing is not possible, preservation tubes are valid alternatives.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-30
Author(s):  
Maryam Alizadeh-Sedigh ◽  
Mohammad Sadegh Fazeli ◽  
Habibollah Mahmoodzadeh ◽  
Shahin Behrouz Sharif ◽  
Ladan Teimoori-Toolabi

BACKGROUND: Investigating aberrant tumor-specific methylation in plasma cell-free DNA provides a promising and noninvasive biomarker for cancer detection. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to investigate methylation status of some promoter regions in the plasma and tumor tissues to find biomarkers for early detection of colorectal cancer. METHODS: This case-control study on seventy colorectal cancer patients and fifty matched healthy controls used Methylation-Specific High-Resolution Melting Curve analysis to evaluate the methylation of the selected promoter regions in converted genomic tissue DNA and plasma cfDNA. RESULTS: The methylation levels in selected regions of SPG20 (+24375 to +24680, +24209 to +24399, and +23625 to +23883), SNCA (+807 to +1013, +7 to +162, and -180 to +7), FBN1 (+223 to +429, +1 to +245, and -18 to -175), ITF2 (+296 to +436 and -180 to +55), SEPT9 (-914412 to -91590 and -99083 to -92264), and MLH1 (-13 to +22) were significantly higher in tumor tissues compared with normal adjacent tissues. The methylation levels of FBN1, ITF2, SNCA, and SPG20 promoters were significantly higher in the patient’s plasma compared to patient’s normal tissue and plasma of healthy control subjects. FBN1, SPG20, and SEPT9 promoter methylation had a good diagnostic performance for discriminating CRC tissues from normal adjacent tissues (AUC > 0.8). A panel of SPG20, FBN1, and SEPT9 methylation had a higher diagnostic value than that of any single biomarker and other panels in tissue-based assay (AUC > 0.9). The methylation of FBN1(a) and SPG20(a) regions, as the closest region to the first coding sequence (CDS), had a good diagnostic performance in plasma cfDNA (AUC > 0.8) while a panel consisted of FBN1(a) and SPG20(a) regions showed excellent diagnostic performance for CRC detection in plasma cfDNA (AUC > 0.9). CONCLUSION: Methylation of FBN1(a) and SPG20(a) promoter regions in the plasma cfDNA can be an excellent simple, non-invasive blood-based test for early detection of CRC.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 3043-3043
Author(s):  
Grace Q. Zhao ◽  
Yun Bao ◽  
Heng Wang ◽  
Wanping Hu ◽  
John Coller ◽  
...  

3043 Background: Assessing the genomic and epigenomic changes on plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA) using next-generation sequencing (NGS) has become increasingly important for cancer detection and treatment selection guidance. However, two major hurdles of existing targeted NGS methods make them impractical for the clinical setting. First, there is no comprehensive, end to end, kit solution available for targeted methylation sequencing (TMS), let alone one that analyzes both mutation and methylation information in one assay. Second, the low yield of cfDNA from clinical blood samples presents a major challenge for conducting multi-omic analysis. Thus, an assay that is capable of both genomic and epigenomic analysis would be advantageous for clinical research and future diagnostic assays. Methods: Here, we report the performance of Point-n-SeqTM dual analysis, a kit solution that can provide in-depth DNA analysis with highly flexible and customizable focused panels to enable both genomic and epigenomic analysis without sample splitting. With custom panels of tens to thousands of markers designed with > 99% first-pass success rate, we conducted both performance validation and multi-center, multi-operator, reproducibility studies. Using spike-in titration of cancer cell-line gDNA with known mutation and methylation profiles, Point-n-Seq assay achieved a reliable detection level down to 0.003% of tumor DNA with a linear relationship between the measured and expected fractions. Benchmarked with conventional targeted sequencing and methylation sequencing, Point-n-Seq solution also demonstrated improved performance, speed and shortened hands-on time. Results: In a pilot clinical study, a colorectal cancer (CRC) TMS panel covering 560 methylation markers and a mutation panel with > 350 hotspot mutations in 22 genes were used in the dual assay. Using 1ml of plasma from late-stage CRC patients, cancer-specific methylation signals were detected in all samples tested, and oncogenic mutations. In an early-stage cohort (33 stage I/II CRC patient ), comparison of the analysis between tumor-informed, personalized-mutation panels (̃100 private SNVs) for each patient and the tumor-independent CRC methylation panels were conducted. The initial results showed that tumor-independent TMS assay achieved a comparable detection compared to the personalized tumor-informed approach. Moreover, cfDNA size information (fragmentome) is also integrated into the analysis of the same Point-n-Seq workflow to improve the assay sensitivity. Conclusions: Point-n-Seq dual analysis is poised to advance both research and clinical applications of early cancer detection, minimal residual disease (MRD), and monitoring.


2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 395-401 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jagdeep Singh Bhangu ◽  
Hossein Taghizadeh ◽  
Tamara Braunschmid ◽  
Thomas Bachleitner-Hofmann ◽  
Christine Mannhalter

2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 915-923 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Kinga Barták ◽  
Alexandra Kalmár ◽  
Orsolya Galamb ◽  
Barnabás Wichmann ◽  
Zsófia Brigitta Nagy ◽  
...  

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