Iorgulescu J Bryan, Blewett Timothy, Xiong Kan, Crnjac Andjela, Liu Ruolin, Sridhar Sainetra, Braun David A, Sellars MacLean C, Cheng Ju, Rhoades Justin, Reardon David A, Makrigiorgos G Mike, Wu Catherine J, Adalsteinsson Viktor A
Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
Clin Chem. 2025 Jan 3;71(1):215-225. doi: 10.1093/clinchem/hvae178.
Minimally invasive molecular profiling using cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is increasingly important to the management of cancer patients; however, low sensitivity remains a major limitation, particularly for brain tumor patients. Transiently attenuating cfDNA clearance from the body-thereby, allowing more cfDNA to be sampled-has been proposed to improve the performance of liquid biopsy diagnostics. However, there is a paucity of clinical data on the effect of higher cfDNA recovery. Here, we investigated the impact of collecting greater quantities of cfDNA on circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) sensitivity in the "low-shedding" cancer type glioblastoma by analyzing up to approximately 15-fold more plasma than routinely obtained clinically.
We tested 70 plasma samples (median 17.0 mL, range 2.5-66.5) from 8 IDH-wild-type glioblastoma patients using an optimized version of the MAESTRO-Pool ctDNA assay. Results were compared with simulated single-blood-tube equivalents of cfDNA. ctDNA results were then compared with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and pathology assessments of true progression vs pseudoprogression in glioblastoma patients.
Larger cfDNA yields exhibited a doubling in ctDNA-positivity while achieving a median specificity of 99% and more precise ctDNA quantification. In 8 glioblastoma patients, ctDNA was detected in 88%, including at multiple timepoints in 6/7. In the setting of indeterminate progression by MRI, our data suggested that MAESTRO-Pool with large plasma volumes can help distinguish true glioblastoma progression from pseudoprogression.
Our findings provide a proof-of-principle that most glioblastomas shed ctDNA into plasma and that greater ctDNA yields could help improve liquid biopsies for "low-shedding" cancer types such as glioblastoma.
使用游离DNA(cfDNA)进行微创分子分析对癌症患者的管理愈发重要;然而,低灵敏度仍是一个主要限制,尤其对于脑肿瘤患者。有人提出,暂时减弱cfDNA从体内的清除,从而允许采集更多cfDNA,以提高液体活检诊断的性能。然而,关于更高cfDNA回收率效果的临床数据匮乏。在此,我们通过分析比临床常规获取量多约15倍的血浆,研究了在“低释放”癌症类型胶质母细胞瘤中收集更多cfDNA对循环肿瘤DNA(ctDNA)灵敏度的影响。
我们使用优化版的MAESTRO-Pool ctDNA检测法,对8例异柠檬酸脱氢酶(IDH)野生型胶质母细胞瘤患者的70份血浆样本(中位数17.0 mL,范围2.5 - 66.5)进行检测。将结果与cfDNA的模拟单管等效样本进行比较。然后将ctDNA结果与胶质母细胞瘤患者真正进展与假性进展的磁共振成像(MRI)及病理评估结果进行比较。
更大的cfDNA产量使ctDNA阳性率翻倍,同时实现了99%的中位数特异性以及更精确的ctDNA定量。在8例胶质母细胞瘤患者中,88%检测到ctDNA,其中6/7在多个时间点检测到。在MRI显示进展不确定的情况下,我们的数据表明,采用大量血浆的MAESTRO-Pool有助于区分胶质母细胞瘤真正的进展与假性进展。
我们的研究结果提供了一个原理证明,即大多数胶质母细胞瘤会向血浆中释放ctDNA,更高的ctDNA产量有助于改善对胶质母细胞瘤等“低释放”癌症类型的液体活检。