Butler Timothy M, Johnson-Camacho Katherine, Peto Myron, Wang Nicholas J, Macey Tara A, Korkola James E, Koppie Theresa M, Corless Christopher L, Gray Joe W, Spellman Paul T
Knight Cancer Institute, Oregon Health and Sciences University, Portland, Oregon, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Aug 28;10(8):e0136407. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0136407. eCollection 2015.
The identification of the molecular drivers of cancer by sequencing is the backbone of precision medicine and the basis of personalized therapy; however, biopsies of primary tumors provide only a snapshot of the evolution of the disease and may miss potential therapeutic targets, especially in the metastatic setting. A liquid biopsy, in the form of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) sequencing, has the potential to capture the inter- and intra-tumoral heterogeneity present in metastatic disease, and, through serial blood draws, track the evolution of the tumor genome. In order to determine the clinical utility of cfDNA sequencing we performed whole-exome sequencing on cfDNA and tumor DNA from two patients with metastatic disease; only minor modifications to our sequencing and analysis pipelines were required for sequencing and mutation calling of cfDNA. The first patient had metastatic sarcoma and 47 of 48 mutations present in the primary tumor were also found in the cell-free DNA. The second patient had metastatic breast cancer and sequencing identified an ESR1 mutation in the cfDNA and metastatic site, but not in the primary tumor. This likely explains tumor progression on Anastrozole. Significant heterogeneity between the primary and metastatic tumors, with cfDNA reflecting the metastases, suggested separation from the primary lesion early in tumor evolution. This is best illustrated by an activating PIK3CA mutation (H1047R) which was clonal in the primary tumor, but completely absent from either the metastasis or cfDNA. Here we show that cfDNA sequencing supplies clinically actionable information with minimal risks compared to metastatic biopsies. This study demonstrates the utility of whole-exome sequencing of cell-free DNA from patients with metastatic disease. cfDNA sequencing identified an ESR1 mutation, potentially explaining a patient's resistance to aromatase inhibition, and gave insight into how metastatic lesions differ from the primary tumor.
通过测序鉴定癌症的分子驱动因素是精准医学的核心,也是个性化治疗的基础;然而,原发性肿瘤活检仅提供疾病演变的一个快照,可能会遗漏潜在的治疗靶点,尤其是在转移情况下。以游离DNA(cfDNA)测序形式进行的液体活检有潜力捕捉转移疾病中存在的肿瘤间和肿瘤内异质性,并通过连续采血追踪肿瘤基因组的演变。为了确定cfDNA测序的临床效用,我们对两名转移性疾病患者的cfDNA和肿瘤DNA进行了全外显子组测序;对我们的测序和分析流程仅进行了微小修改,即可用于cfDNA的测序和突变检测。第一名患者患有转移性肉瘤,原发性肿瘤中存在的48个突变中有47个也在游离DNA中被发现。第二名患者患有转移性乳腺癌,测序在cfDNA和转移部位发现了ESR1突变,但在原发性肿瘤中未发现。这可能解释了阿那曲唑治疗下的肿瘤进展。原发性肿瘤和转移性肿瘤之间存在显著异质性,cfDNA反映了转移灶,提示在肿瘤演变早期就与原发性病灶分离。这一点在一个激活型PIK3CA突变(H1047R)中体现得最为明显,该突变在原发性肿瘤中是克隆性的,但在转移灶或cfDNA中完全不存在。在这里我们表明,与转移性活检相比,cfDNA测序以最小的风险提供了临床可操作的信息。这项研究证明了对转移性疾病患者的游离DNA进行全外显子组测序的效用。cfDNA测序鉴定出一个ESR1突变,可能解释了患者对芳香化酶抑制的耐药性,并深入了解了转移灶与原发性肿瘤的差异。