4.6 Review

Biomarkers in Lung Cancer Screening: Achievements, Promises, and Challenges

Journal

JOURNAL OF THORACIC ONCOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 343-357

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtho.2018.11.023

Keywords

Biomarkers; Lung cancer; Screening; Test validation; Clinical utility; Trial design

Funding

  1. Foundation for Medical Research (FIMA)
  2. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Innovation
  3. Health Research Fund (FIS)/European Regional Development Fund (FEDER) (FIS) [PI16/01821, PI17/00411]
  4. Health Research Fund (FIS)/European Regional Development Fund (FEDER) (CIBERONC)
  5. Spanish Association Against Cancer (AECC) Scientific Foundation [GCB14-2170, PROYE16091]
  6. Juan Serrano and Ramon Areces Foundation
  7. Italian Association for Cancer Research [18812]
  8. Fondazione Pezcoller Fellowship
  9. National Cancer Institute [A152662]
  10. 5 x 1000 grant from the Italian Association for Cancer Research [12162]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The present review is an update of the research and development efforts regarding the use of molecular biomarkers in the lung cancer screening setting. The two main unmet clinical needs, namely, the refinement of risk to improve the selection of individuals undergoing screening and the characterization of undetermined nodules found during the computed tomography-based screening process are the object of the biomarkers described in the present review. We first propose some principles to optimize lung cancer biomarker discovery projects. Then, we summarize the discovery and developmental status of currently promising molecular candidates, such as autoantibodies, complement fragments, microRNAs, circulating tumor DNA, DNA methylation, blood protein profiling, or RNA airway or nasal signatures. We also mention other emerging biomarkers or new technologies to follow, such as exhaled breath biomarkers, metabolomics, sputum cell imaging, genetic predisposition studies, and the integration of next-generation sequencing into study of circulating DNA. We also underline the importance of integrating different molecular technologies together with imaging, radiomics, and artificial intelligence. We list a number of completed, ongoing, or planned trials to show the clinical utility of molecular biomarkers. Finally, we comment on future research challenges in the field of biomarkers in the context of lung cancer screening and propose a design of a trial to test the clinical utility of one or several candidate biomarkers. (C) 2018 International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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