Feasibility of blood testing combined with PET-CT to screen for cancer and guide intervention

Anne Marie Lennon(Johns Hopkins University), Adam H. Buchanan(Geisinger Medical Center), Isaac Kinde(Detection Limit (United States)), Andrew Warren(Detection Limit (United States)), Ashley Honushefsky(Geisinger Medical Center), Ariella Cohain(Detection Limit (United States)), David H. Ledbetter(Geisinger Medical Center), Fred Sanfilippo(Emory University), Kathleen Sheridan(Geisinger Medical Center), Dillenia Rosica(Geisinger Medical Center), Christian S. Adonizio(Geisinger Medical Center), Hee Jung Hwang(Detection Limit (United States)), Kamel Lahouel(Johns Hopkins University), Joshua D. Cohen(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Christopher Douville(Johns Hopkins University), Aalpen A. Patel(Geisinger Medical Center), Leonardo N. Hagmann(Detection Limit (United States)), David D.K. Rolston(Geisinger Medical Center), Nirav Malani(Detection Limit (United States)), Shibin Zhou(Johns Hopkins University), Chetan Bettegowda(Johns Hopkins University), David L. Diehl(Geisinger Medical Center), Bobbi Urban(Detection Limit (United States)), Christopher D. Still(Geisinger Medical Center), Lisa Kann(Detection Limit (United States)), Julie Woods(Geisinger Medical Center), Zachary Salvati(Geisinger Medical Center), Joseph Vadakara(Geisinger Medical Center), Rosemary Leeming(Geisinger Medical Center), Prianka Bhattacharya(Geisinger Medical Center), Carroll N. Walter(Geisinger Medical Center), Alex Parker(Detection Limit (United States)), Christoph Lengauer(Detection Limit (United States)), Alison P. Klein(Johns Hopkins University), Cristian Tomasetti(Johns Hopkins University), Elliot K. Fishman(Johns Hopkins University), Ralph H. Hruban(Johns Hopkins University), Kenneth W. Kinzler(Johns Hopkins University), Bert Vogelstein(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Nickolas Papadopoulos(Johns Hopkins University)
Science
April 28, 2020
Cited by 657Open Access
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Abstract

Cancer treatments are often more successful when the disease is detected early. We evaluated the feasibility and safety of multicancer blood testing coupled with positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) imaging to detect cancer in a prospective, interventional study of 10,006 women not previously known to have cancer. Positive blood tests were independently confirmed by a diagnostic PET-CT, which also localized the cancer. Twenty-six cancers were detected by blood testing. Of these, 15 underwent PET-CT imaging and nine (60%) were surgically excised. Twenty-four additional cancers were detected by standard-of-care screening and 46 by neither approach. One percent of participants underwent PET-CT imaging based on false-positive blood tests, and 0.22% underwent a futile invasive diagnostic procedure. These data demonstrate that multicancer blood testing combined with PET-CT can be safely incorporated into routine clinical care, in some cases leading to surgery with intent to cure.


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