The evidence base for circulating tumour DNA blood-based biomarkers for the early detection of cancer: a systematic mapping review
Background: The presence of circulating cell-free DNA from tumours in blood (ctDNA) is of major importance to those interested in early cancer detection, as well as to those wishing to monitor tumour progression or diagnose the presence of activating mutations to guide treatment. In 2014, the UK Ear...
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: The presence of circulating cell-free DNA from tumours in blood (ctDNA) is of major importance to
those interested in early cancer detection, as well as to those wishing to monitor tumour progression or diagnose
the presence of activating mutations to guide treatment. In 2014, the UK Early Cancer Detection Consortium
undertook a systematic mapping review of the literature to identify blood-based biomarkers with potential for the
development of a non-invasive blood test for cancer screening, and which identified this as a major area of interest.
This review builds on the mapping review to expand the ctDNA dataset to examine the best options for the
detection of multiple cancer types.
Methods: The original mapping review was based on comprehensive searches of the electronic databases Medline,
Embase, CINAHL, the Cochrane library, and Biosis to obtain relevant literature on blood-based biomarkers for cancer
detection in humans (PROSPERO no. CRD42014010827). The abstracts for each paper were reviewed to determine
whether validation data were reported, and then examined in full. Publications concentrating on monitoring of
disease burden or mutations were excluded.
Results: The search identified 94 ctDNA studies meeting the criteria for review. All but 5 studies examined one
cancer type, with breast, colorectal and lung cancers representing 60% of studies. The size and design of the
studies varied widely. Controls were included in 77% of publications. The largest study included 640 patients, but
the median study size was 65 cases and 35 controls, and the bulk of studies (71%) included less than 100 patients.
Studies either estimated cfDNA levels non-specifically or tested for cancer-specific mutations or methylation
changes (the majority using PCR-based methods).
Conclusion: We have systematically reviewed ctDNA blood biomarkers for the early detection of cancer. Preanalytical,
analytical, and post-analytical considerations were identified which need to be addressed before such
biomarkers enter clinical practice. The value of small studies with no comparison between methods, or even the
inclusion of controls is highly questionable, and larger validation studies will be required before such methods can
be considered for early cancer detection. |
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DOI: | 10.1186/s12885-017-3693-7 |