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Analysis of tumor template from multiple compartments in a blood sample provides complementary access to peripheral tumor biomarkers

Targeted cancer therapeutics are promised to have a major impact on cancer treatment and survival. Successful application of these novel treatments requires a molecular definition of a patient's disease typically achieved through the use of tissue biopsies. Alternatively, allowing longitudinal...

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Autores principales: Strauss, William M., Carter, Chris, Simmons, Jill, Klem, Erich, Goodman, Nathan, Vahidi, Behrad, Romero, Juan, Masterman-Smith, Michael, O'Regan, Ruth, Gogineni, Keerthi, Schwartzberg, Lee, Austin, Laura K., Dempsey, Paul W., Cristofanilli, Massimo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5042010/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27049831
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.8494
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author Strauss, William M.
Carter, Chris
Simmons, Jill
Klem, Erich
Goodman, Nathan
Vahidi, Behrad
Romero, Juan
Masterman-Smith, Michael
O'Regan, Ruth
Gogineni, Keerthi
Schwartzberg, Lee
Austin, Laura K.
Dempsey, Paul W.
Cristofanilli, Massimo
author_facet Strauss, William M.
Carter, Chris
Simmons, Jill
Klem, Erich
Goodman, Nathan
Vahidi, Behrad
Romero, Juan
Masterman-Smith, Michael
O'Regan, Ruth
Gogineni, Keerthi
Schwartzberg, Lee
Austin, Laura K.
Dempsey, Paul W.
Cristofanilli, Massimo
author_sort Strauss, William M.
collection PubMed
description Targeted cancer therapeutics are promised to have a major impact on cancer treatment and survival. Successful application of these novel treatments requires a molecular definition of a patient's disease typically achieved through the use of tissue biopsies. Alternatively, allowing longitudinal monitoring, biomarkers derived from blood, isolated either from circulating tumor cell derived DNA (ctcDNA) or circulating cell-free tumor DNA (ccfDNA) may be evaluated. In order to use blood derived templates for mutational profiling in clinical decisions, it is essential to understand the different template qualities and how they compare to biopsy derived template DNA as both blood-based templates are rare and distinct from the gold-standard. Using a next generation re-sequencing strategy, concordance of the mutational spectrum was evaluated in 32 patient-matched ctcDNA and ccfDNA templates with comparison to tissue biopsy derived DNA template. Different CTC antibody capture systems for DNA isolation from patient blood samples were also compared. Significant overlap was observed between ctcDNA, ccfDNA and tissue derived templates. Interestingly, if the results of ctcDNA and ccfDNA template sequencing were combined, productive samples showed similar detection frequency (56% vs 58%), were temporally flexible, and were complementary both to each other and the gold standard. These observations justify the use of a multiple template approach to the liquid biopsy, where germline, ctcDNA, and ccfDNA templates are employed for clinical diagnostic purposes and open a path to comprehensive blood derived biomarker access.
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spelling pubmed-50420102016-10-10 Analysis of tumor template from multiple compartments in a blood sample provides complementary access to peripheral tumor biomarkers Strauss, William M. Carter, Chris Simmons, Jill Klem, Erich Goodman, Nathan Vahidi, Behrad Romero, Juan Masterman-Smith, Michael O'Regan, Ruth Gogineni, Keerthi Schwartzberg, Lee Austin, Laura K. Dempsey, Paul W. Cristofanilli, Massimo Oncotarget Research Paper Targeted cancer therapeutics are promised to have a major impact on cancer treatment and survival. Successful application of these novel treatments requires a molecular definition of a patient's disease typically achieved through the use of tissue biopsies. Alternatively, allowing longitudinal monitoring, biomarkers derived from blood, isolated either from circulating tumor cell derived DNA (ctcDNA) or circulating cell-free tumor DNA (ccfDNA) may be evaluated. In order to use blood derived templates for mutational profiling in clinical decisions, it is essential to understand the different template qualities and how they compare to biopsy derived template DNA as both blood-based templates are rare and distinct from the gold-standard. Using a next generation re-sequencing strategy, concordance of the mutational spectrum was evaluated in 32 patient-matched ctcDNA and ccfDNA templates with comparison to tissue biopsy derived DNA template. Different CTC antibody capture systems for DNA isolation from patient blood samples were also compared. Significant overlap was observed between ctcDNA, ccfDNA and tissue derived templates. Interestingly, if the results of ctcDNA and ccfDNA template sequencing were combined, productive samples showed similar detection frequency (56% vs 58%), were temporally flexible, and were complementary both to each other and the gold standard. These observations justify the use of a multiple template approach to the liquid biopsy, where germline, ctcDNA, and ccfDNA templates are employed for clinical diagnostic purposes and open a path to comprehensive blood derived biomarker access. Impact Journals LLC 2016-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5042010/ /pubmed/27049831 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.8494 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Strauss et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Strauss, William M.
Carter, Chris
Simmons, Jill
Klem, Erich
Goodman, Nathan
Vahidi, Behrad
Romero, Juan
Masterman-Smith, Michael
O'Regan, Ruth
Gogineni, Keerthi
Schwartzberg, Lee
Austin, Laura K.
Dempsey, Paul W.
Cristofanilli, Massimo
Analysis of tumor template from multiple compartments in a blood sample provides complementary access to peripheral tumor biomarkers
title Analysis of tumor template from multiple compartments in a blood sample provides complementary access to peripheral tumor biomarkers
title_full Analysis of tumor template from multiple compartments in a blood sample provides complementary access to peripheral tumor biomarkers
title_fullStr Analysis of tumor template from multiple compartments in a blood sample provides complementary access to peripheral tumor biomarkers
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of tumor template from multiple compartments in a blood sample provides complementary access to peripheral tumor biomarkers
title_short Analysis of tumor template from multiple compartments in a blood sample provides complementary access to peripheral tumor biomarkers
title_sort analysis of tumor template from multiple compartments in a blood sample provides complementary access to peripheral tumor biomarkers
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5042010/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27049831
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.8494
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