Mutation tracking in circulating tumor DNA predicts relapse in early breast cancer

Isaac García-Murillas(Institute of Cancer Research), Gaia Schiavon(Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust), Britta Weigelt(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Charlotte K.Y. Ng(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Sarah Hrebien(Institute of Cancer Research), Rosalind Cutts(Institute of Cancer Research), Maggie C.U. Cheang(Institute of Cancer Research), Peter Osin(Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust), Ashutosh Nerurkar(Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust), Iwanka Kozarewa(Institute of Cancer Research), Javier Armisen Garrido(Institute of Cancer Research), Mitch Dowsett(Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust), Jorge S. Reis‐Filho(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Ian E. Smith(Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust), Nicholas C. Turner(Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust)
Science Translational Medicine
August 26, 2015
Cited by 1,126

Abstract

The identification of early-stage breast cancer patients at high risk of relapse would allow tailoring of adjuvant therapy approaches. We assessed whether analysis of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in plasma can be used to monitor for minimal residual disease (MRD) in breast cancer. In a prospective cohort of 55 early breast cancer patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy, detection of ctDNA in plasma after completion of apparently curative treatment-either at a single postsurgical time point or with serial follow-up plasma samples-predicted metastatic relapse with high accuracy [hazard ratio, 25.1 (confidence interval, 4.08 to 130.5; log-rank P < 0.0001) or 12.0 (confidence interval, 3.36 to 43.07; log-rank P < 0.0001), respectively]. Mutation tracking in serial samples increased sensitivity for the prediction of relapse, with a median lead time of 7.9 months over clinical relapse. We further demonstrated that targeted capture sequencing analysis of ctDNA could define the genetic events of MRD, and that MRD sequencing predicted the genetic events of the subsequent metastatic relapse more accurately than sequencing of the primary cancer. Mutation tracking can therefore identify early breast cancer patients at high risk of relapse. Subsequent adjuvant therapeutic interventions could be tailored to the genetic events present in the MRD, a therapeutic approach that could in part combat the challenge posed by intratumor genetic heterogeneity.


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