Circulating tumor DNA monitoring for early recurrence detection in epithelial ovarian cancer

Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the most lethal gynecologic malignancy. We examined the utility of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) as a prognostic biomarker for EOC by assessing its relationship with patient outcome and CA-125, pre-surgically and during post-treatment surveillance. Plasma samples w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gynecologic oncology 2022-11, Vol.167 (2), p.334-341
Hauptverfasser: Hou, June Y., Chapman, Jocelyn S., Kalashnikova, Ekaterina, Pierson, William, Smith-McCune, Karen, Pineda, Geovanni, Vattakalam, Reena Marie, Ross, Alexandra, Mills, Meredith, Suarez, Carlos J., Davis, Tracy, Edwards, Robert, Boisen, Michelle, Sawyer, Sarah, Wu, Hsin-Ta, Dashner, Scott, Aushev, Vasily N., George, Giby V., Malhotra, Meenakshi, Zimmermann, Bernhard, Sethi, Himanshu, ElNaggar, Adam C., Aleshin, Alexey, Ford, James M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the most lethal gynecologic malignancy. We examined the utility of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) as a prognostic biomarker for EOC by assessing its relationship with patient outcome and CA-125, pre-surgically and during post-treatment surveillance. Plasma samples were collected from patients with stage I-IV EOC. Cohort A included patients with pre-surgical samples (N = 44, median follow-up: 2.7 years), cohort B and C included: patients with serially collected post-surgically (N = 12) and, during surveillance (N = 13), respectively (median follow-up: 2 years). Plasma samples were analyzed using a tumor-informed, personalized multiplex-PCR NGS assay; ctDNA status and CA-125 levels were correlated with clinical features and outcomes. Genomic profiling was performed on the entire cohort and was consistent with that seen in TCGA. In cohort A, ctDNA-positivity was observed in 73% (32/44) of presurgical samples and was higher in high nuclear grade disease. In cohort B and C, ctDNA was only detected in patients who relapsed (100% sensitivity and specificity) and preceded radiological findings by an average of 10 months. The presence of ctDNA at a single timepoint after completion of surgery +/− adjuvant chemotherapy and serially during surveillance was a strong predictor of relapse (HR:17.6, p = 0.001 and p < 0.0001, respectively), while CA-125 positivity was not (p = 0.113 and p = 0.056). The presence of ctDNA post-surgically is highly prognostic of reduced recurrence-free survival. CtDNA outperformed CA-125 in identifying patients at highest risk of recurrence. These results suggest that monitoring ctDNA could be beneficial in clinical decision-making for EOC patients. •Post-surgical ctDNA detection is prognostic of reduced recurrence-free survival.•Post-surgically, ctDNA detected relapse with 100% sensitivity and specificity.•ctDNA detection preceded radiological findings by an average lead time of 10 months.•The presence of ctDNA and not CA-125 was a strong predictor of relapse.
ISSN:0090-8258
1095-6859
1095-6859
DOI:10.1016/j.ygyno.2022.09.004