Tie J, Kinde I, Wang Y, Wong H L, Roebert J, Christie M, Tacey M, Wong R, Singh M, Karapetis C S, Desai J, Tran B, Strausberg R L, Diaz L A, Papadopoulos N, Kinzler K W, Vogelstein B, Gibbs P
Division of Systems Biology and Personalised Medicine, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne Department of Medical Oncology, Western Hospital, Melbourne Department of Medical Oncology, The Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne Faculty of Medicine Dentistry and Health Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia
Ludwig Center for Cancer Genetics and Therapeutics, Howard Hughes Medical Institute at Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, Baltimore, USA.
Ann Oncol. 2015 Aug;26(8):1715-22. doi: 10.1093/annonc/mdv177. Epub 2015 Apr 7.
Early indicators of treatment response in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) could conceivably be used to optimize treatment. We explored early changes in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) levels as a marker of therapeutic efficacy.
This prospective study involved 53 mCRC patients receiving standard first-line chemotherapy. Both ctDNA and CEA were assessed in plasma collected before treatment, 3 days after treatment and before cycle 2. Computed tomography (CT) scans were carried out at baseline and 8-10 weeks and were centrally assessed using RECIST v1.1 criteria. Tumors were sequenced using a panel of 15 genes frequently mutated in mCRC to identify candidate mutations for ctDNA analysis. For each patient, one tumor mutation was selected to assess the presence and the level of ctDNA in plasma samples using a digital genomic assay termed Safe-SeqS.
Candidate mutations for ctDNA analysis were identified in 52 (98.1%) of the tumors. These patient-specific candidate tissue mutations were detectable in the cell-free DNA from the plasma of 48 of these 52 patients (concordance 92.3%). Significant reductions in ctDNA (median 5.7-fold; P < 0.001) levels were observed before cycle 2, which correlated with CT responses at 8-10 weeks (odds ratio = 5.25 with a 10-fold ctDNA reduction; P = 0.016). Major reductions (≥10-fold) versus lesser reductions in ctDNA precycle 2 were associated with a trend for increased progression-free survival (median 14.7 versus 8.1 months; HR = 1.87; P = 0.266).
ctDNA is detectable in a high proportion of treatment naïve mCRC patients. Early changes in ctDNA during first-line chemotherapy predict the later radiologic response.
转移性结直肠癌(mCRC)治疗反应的早期指标理论上可用于优化治疗。我们探讨了循环肿瘤DNA(ctDNA)水平的早期变化作为治疗效果的标志物。
这项前瞻性研究纳入了53例接受标准一线化疗的mCRC患者。在治疗前、治疗后3天和第2周期前采集的血浆中评估ctDNA和癌胚抗原(CEA)。在基线期和8 - 10周时进行计算机断层扫描(CT),并使用RECIST v1.1标准进行集中评估。使用一组在mCRC中频繁突变的15个基因对肿瘤进行测序,以鉴定用于ctDNA分析的候选突变。对于每位患者,选择一个肿瘤突变,使用称为Safe-SeqS的数字基因组分析方法评估血浆样本中ctDNA的存在和水平。
在52例(98.1%)肿瘤中鉴定出用于ctDNA分析的候选突变。这52例患者中有48例患者血浆中的游离DNA中可检测到这些患者特异性的候选组织突变(一致性为92.3%)。在第2周期前观察到ctDNA水平显著降低(中位数为5.7倍;P < 0.001),这与8 - 10周时的CT反应相关(ctDNA降低10倍时的优势比 = 5.25;P = 0.016)。第2周期前ctDNA大幅降低(≥10倍)与轻度降低相比,无进展生存期有增加趋势(中位数分别为14.7个月和8.1个月;风险比 = 1.87;P = 0.266)。
在大部分未经治疗的mCRC患者中可检测到ctDNA。一线化疗期间ctDNA的早期变化可预测后期的影像学反应。