Circulating tumour DNA sequence analysis as an alternative to multiple myeloma bone marrow aspirates

Olena Kis(University Health Network), Rayan Kaedbey(University Health Network), Signy Chow(University Health Network), Arnavaz Danesh(University Health Network), Mark Dowar(University Health Network), Tiantian Li(University Health Network), Zhihua Li(University Health Network), Jessica Liu(University Health Network), Mark Mansour(University Health Network), Esther Masih‐Khan(University Health Network), Tong Zhang(University Health Network), Scott V. Bratman(University Health Network), Amit M. Oza(University Health Network), Suzanne Kamel‐Reid(University Health Network), Suzanne Trudel(University Health Network), Trevor J. Pugh(University Health Network)
Nature Communications
May 11, 2017
Cited by 136Open Access
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Abstract

The requirement for bone-marrow aspirates for genomic profiling of multiple myeloma poses an obstacle to enrolment and retention of patients in clinical trials. We evaluated whether circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) analysis is comparable to molecular profiling of myeloma using bone-marrow tumour cells. We report here a hybrid-capture-based Liquid Biopsy Sequencing (LB-Seq) method used to sequence all protein-coding exons of KRAS, NRAS, BRAF, EGFR and PIK3CA in 64 cfDNA specimens from 53 myeloma patients to >20,000 × median coverage. This method includes a variant filtering algorithm that enables detection of tumour-derived fragments present in cfDNA at allele frequencies as low as 0.25% (median 3.2%, range 0.25-46%). Using LB-Seq analysis of 48 cfDNA specimens with matched bone-marrow data, we detect 49/51 likely somatic mutations, with subclonal hierarchies reflecting tumour profiling (96% concordance), and four additional mutations likely missed by bone-marrow testing (>98% specificity). Overall, LB-Seq is a high fidelity adjunct to genetic profiling of bone-marrow in multiple myeloma.


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