Serial monitoring of genomic alterations in circulating tumor cells of ER-positive/HER2-negative advanced breast cancer: feasibility of precision oncology biomarker detection.
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Authors
Dolce, Emily M
Hu, Kevin
Liu, Chia-Jen
Pierce, Jackie
Bradbury, Kieran
Kilgour, Elaine
Aung, Kimberly
Schiavon, Gaia
Carroll, Danielle
Carr, T Hedley
Klinowska, Teresa
Lindemann, Justin
Marshall, Gayle
Rowlands, Vicky
Harrington, Elizabeth A
Barrett, J Carl
Sathiyayogan, Nitharsan
Sero, Valeria
Armstrong, Anne C
Baird, Richard
Hamilton, Erika
Im, Seock-Ah
Jhaveri, Komal
Patel, Manish R
Dive, Caroline
Tomlins, Scott A
Udager, Aaron M
Hayes, Daniel F
Paoletti, Costanza
Publication Date
2022-05Journal Title
Mol Oncol
ISSN
1574-7891
Publisher
Wiley
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Physical Medium
Print-Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Cani, A. K., Dolce, E. M., Darga, E. P., Hu, K., Liu, C., Pierce, J., Bradbury, K., et al. (2022). Serial monitoring of genomic alterations in circulating tumor cells of ER-positive/HER2-negative advanced breast cancer: feasibility of precision oncology biomarker detection.. Mol Oncol https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13150
Abstract
Nearly all estrogen receptor (ER)-positive (POS) metastatic breast cancers become refractory to endocrine (ET) and other therapies, leading to lethal disease presumably due to evolving genomic alterations. Timely monitoring of the molecular events associated with response/progression by serial tissue biopsies is logistically difficult. Use of liquid biopsies, including circulating tumor cells (CTC) and circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), might provide highly informative, yet easily obtainable, evidence for better precision oncology care. Although ctDNA profiling has been well investigated, the CTC precision oncology genomic landscape and the advantages it may offer over ctDNA in ER-POS breast cancer remain largely unexplored. Whole-blood (WB) specimens were collected at serial time points from patients with advanced ER-POS/HER2-negative (NEG) advanced breast cancer in a phase I trial of AZD9496, an oral selective ER degrader (SERD) ET. Individual CTC were isolated from WB using tandem CellSearch® /DEPArray™ technologies and genomically profiled by targeted single-cell DNA next-generation sequencing (scNGS). High-quality CTC (n = 123) from 12 patients profiled by scNGS showed 100% concordance with ctDNA detection of driver estrogen receptor α (ESR1) mutations. We developed a novel CTC-based framework for precision medicine actionability reporting (MI-CTCseq) that incorporates novel features, such as clonal predominance and zygosity of targetable alterations, both unambiguously identifiable in CTC compared to ctDNA. Thus, we nominated opportunities for targeted therapies in 73% of patients, directed at alterations in phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase catalytic subunit alpha (PIK3CA), fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 (FGFR2), and KIT proto-oncogene, receptor tyrosine kinase (KIT). Intrapatient, inter-CTC genomic heterogeneity was observed, at times between time points, in subclonal alterations. Our analysis suggests that serial monitoring of the CTC genome is feasible and should enable real-time tracking of tumor evolution during progression, permitting more combination precision medicine interventions.
Keywords
circulating tumor DNA, circulating tumor cells, liquid biopsy, precision medicine, tumor evolution, tumor heterogeneity, Biomarkers, Tumor, Breast Neoplasms, Circulating Tumor DNA, Estrogen Antagonists, Feasibility Studies, Female, Genomics, Humans, Mutation, Neoplastic Cells, Circulating, Precision Medicine
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13150
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331769
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