Cell-Free DNA Next-Generation Sequencing in Pancreatobiliary Carcinomas

Oliver A. Zill(University of California, San Francisco), Claire Greene(University of California, San Francisco), Dragan Sebisanovic(Guardant (United States)), Lai Mun Siew(Guardant (United States)), Jim Leng(University of California, San Francisco), Mary Vu(USA Mitchell Cancer Institute), Andrew Hendifar(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Zhen Wang(UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center), Chloé E. Atreya(University of California, San Francisco), Robin Kate Kelley(University of California, San Francisco), Katherine Van Loon(University of California, San Francisco), Andrew H. Ko(University of California, San Francisco), Margaret A. Tempero(University of California, San Francisco), Trever G. Bivona(University of California, San Francisco), Pamela N. Münster(University of California, San Francisco), AmirAli Talasaz(Guardant (United States)), Eric A. Collisson(University of California, San Francisco)
Cancer Discovery
June 24, 2015
Cited by 283

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Patients with pancreatic and biliary carcinomas lack personalized treatment options, in part because biopsies are often inadequate for molecular characterization. Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) sequencing may enable a precision oncology approach in this setting. We attempted to prospectively analyze 54 genes in tumor and cfDNA for 26 patients. Tumor sequencing failed in 9 patients (35%). In the remaining 17, 90.3% (95% confidence interval, 73.1%-97.5%) of mutations detected in tumor biopsies were also detected in cfDNA. The diagnostic accuracy of cfDNA sequencing was 97.7%, with 92.3% average sensitivity and 100% specificity across five informative genes. Changes in cfDNA correlated well with tumor marker dynamics in serial sampling (r = 0.93). We demonstrate that cfDNA sequencing is feasible, accurate, and sensitive in identifying tumor-derived mutations without prior knowledge of tumor genotype or the abundance of circulating tumor DNA. cfDNA sequencing should be considered in pancreatobiliary cancer trials where tissue sampling is unsafe, infeasible, or otherwise unsuccessful. SIGNIFICANCE: Precision medicine efforts in biliary and pancreatic cancers have been frustrated by difficulties in obtaining adequate tumor tissue for next-generation sequencing. cfDNA sequencing reliably and accurately detects tumor-derived mutations, paving the way for precision oncology approaches in these deadly diseases.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis