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  5. Serial postoperative circulating tumor DNA assessment has strong prognostic value during long-term follow-up in patients with breast cancer
 
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Serial postoperative circulating tumor DNA assessment has strong prognostic value during long-term follow-up in patients with breast cancer
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Serial Postoperative Circulating Tumor DNA Assessment Has Strong Prognostic Value During Long-Term Follow-Up in Patients Wit.pdf (1.08 MB)
Published version
Author(s)
Shaw, Jacqueline A
Page, Karen
Wren, Evie
de Bruin, Elza C
Kalashnikova, Ekaterina
more
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Purpose
Here, we report the sensitivity of a personalized, tumor-informed circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) assay (Signatera) for detection of molecular relapse during long-term follow-up of patients with breast cancer.
Methods
A total of 156 patients with primary breast cancer were monitored clinically for up to 12 years after surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy. Semiannual blood samples were prospectively collected, and analyzed retrospectively to detect residual disease by ultradeep sequencing using ctDNA assays, developed from primary tumor whole-exome sequencing data.
Results
Personalized Signatera assays detected ctDNA ahead of clinical or radiologic relapse in 30 of the 34 patients who relapsed (patient-level sensitivity of 88.2%). Relapse was predicted with a lead interval of up to 38 months (median, 10.5 months; range, 0-38 months), and ctDNA positivity was associated with shorter relapse-free survival (P < .0001) and overall survival (P < .0001). All relapsing triple-negative patients (n = 7/23) had a ctDNA-positive test within a median of 8 months (range, 0-19 months), while the 16 nonrelapsed patients with triple-negative breast cancer remained ctDNA-negative during a median follow-up of 58 months (range, 8-99 months). The four patients who had negative tests before relapse all had hormone receptor–positive (HR+) disease and conversely, five of the 122 nonrelapsed patients (all HR+) had an occasional positive test.
Conclusion
Serial postoperative ctDNA assessment has strong prognostic value, provides a potential window for earlier therapeutic intervention, and may enable more effective monitoring than current clinical tests such as cancer antigen 15-3. Our study provides evidence that those with serially negative ctDNA tests have superior clinical outcomes, providing reassurance to patients with breast cancer. For select cases with HR+ disease, decisions about treatment management might require serial monitoring despite the ctDNA-positive result.
Date Issued
2024-05-01
Date Acceptance
2024-04-01
Citation
JCO Precision Oncology, 2024, 8
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/125424
URL
https://doi.org/10.1200/po.23.00456
DOI
https://www.dx.doi.org/10.1200/PO.23.00456
ISSN
2473-4284
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology
Journal / Book Title
JCO Precision Oncology
Volume
8
Issue
8
Copyright Statement
© 2024 by American Society of Clinical Oncology. Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
License URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Identifier
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38691816
Subjects
CTDNA
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Oncology
Science & Technology
Publication Status
Published
Coverage Spatial
United States
Article Number
e2300456
Date Publish Online
2024-05-01
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