Sensitive Detection of Minimal Residual Disease in Patients Treated for Early-Stage Breast Cancer
Author(s)
Parsons, Heather A.; Rhoades, Justin; Reed, Sarah C.; Gydush, Gregory; Ram, Priyanka; Exman, Pedro; Xiong, Kan; Lo, Christopher C.; Li, Tianyu; Fleharty, Mark; Kirkner, Gregory J.; Rotem, Denisse; Cohen, Ofir; Yu, Fangyan; Fitarelli-Kiehl, Mariana; Leong, Ka Wai; Hughes, Melissa E.; Rosenberg, Shoshana M.; Collins, Laura C.; Miller, Kathy D.; Blumenstiel, Brendan; Trippa, Lorenzo; Cibulskis, Carrie; Neuberg, Donna S.; DeFelice, Matthew; Freeman, Samuel S.; Lennon, Niall J.; Wagle, Nikhil; Ha, Gavin; Stover, Daniel G.; Choudhury, Atish D.; Getz, Gad; Winer, Eric P.; Meyerson, Matthew; Lin, Nancy U.; Krop, Ian; Love, J. Christopher; Makrigiorgos, G. Mike; Partridge, Ann H.; Mayer, Erica L.; Golub, Todd R.; Adalsteinsson, Viktor A.; ... Show more Show less
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© 2020 American Association for Cancer Research. Purpose: Existing cell-free DNA (cfDNA) methods lack the sensitivity needed for detecting minimal residual disease (MRD) following therapy. We developed a test for tracking hundreds of patient-specific mutations to detect MRD with a 1,000-fold lower error rate than conventional sequencing. Experimental Design: We compared the sensitivity of our approach to digital droplet PCR (ddPCR) in a dilution series, then retrospectively identified two cohorts of patients who had undergone prospective plasma sampling and clinical data collection: 16 patients with ER+/HER2- metastatic breast cancer (MBC) sampled within 6 months following metastatic diagnosis and 142 patients with stage 0 to III breast cancer who received curative-intent treatment with most sampled at surgery and 1 year postoperative. We performed whole-exome sequencing of tumors and designed individualized MRD tests, which we applied to serial cfDNA samples. Results: Our approach was 100-fold more sensitive than ddPCR when tracking 488 mutations, but most patients had fewer identifiable tumor mutations to track in cfDNA (median = 57; range = 2–346). Clinical sensitivity was 81% (n = 13/16) in newly diagnosed MBC, 23% (n = 7/30) at postoperative and 19% (n = 6/32) at 1 year in early-stage disease, and highest in patients with the most tumor mutations available to track. MRD detection at 1 year was strongly associated with distant recurrence [HR = 20.8; 95% confidence interval, 7.3–58.9]. Median lead time from first positive sample to recurrence was 18.9 months (range = 3.4–39.2 months). Conclusions: Tracking large numbers of individualized tumor mutations in cfDNA can improve MRD detection, but its sensitivity is driven by the number of tumor mutations available to track.
Date issued
2020-03Department
Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MITJournal
Clinical Cancer Research
Publisher
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
ISSN
1078-0432
1557-3265