4.6 Article

Complementary Sequential Circulating Tumor Cell (CTC) and Cell-Free Tumor DNA (ctDNA) Profiling Reveals Metastatic Heterogeneity and Genomic Changes in Lung Cancer and Breast Cancer

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FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
卷 11, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.698551

关键词

circulating tumor cells; cell-free tumor DNA; amplicon-sequencing; metastatic signatures; genomic heterogeneity; evolving alterations; lung cancer; breast cancer

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资金

  1. Joint Council Office (JCO), Agency for Science, Technology and Research, Singapore [14302FG096]
  2. National Medical Research Council (NMRC), Singapore [NMRC/OFYIRG/0056/2017]
  3. NMRC, Singapore [MOH-CSAINV18nov-0009]
  4. NMRC - Open Fund Large Collaboration Grant [NMRC/OFLCG/002/2018]
  5. Trailblazer Foundation, Singapore Millennium Foundation
  6. National Cancer Centre Research Fund

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This study conducted concurrent analysis of CTCs and ctDNA using the DropCell platform, revealing the heterogeneity of metastatic tumor in circulation and the progressive genomic changes that may guide the selection of appropriate therapy against evolving tumor clonality. The findings emphasized the impact of the metastatic phenotype and correlated alterations detected in circulation with worse survival outcome for both lung and breast cancer patients. Notably, evolving genetic signatures were detected in CTCs and ctDNA samples during the course of treatment and disease progression.
Introduction Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and cell-free tumor DNA (ctDNA) are tumor components present in circulation. Due to the limited access to both CTC enrichment platforms and ctDNA sequencing in most laboratories, they are rarely analyzed together. Methods Concurrent isolation of ctDNA and single CTCs were isolated from lung cancer and breast cancer patients using the combination of size-based and CD45-negative selection method via DropCell platform. We performed targeted amplicon sequencing to evaluate the genomic heterogeneity of CTCs and ctDNA in lung cancer and breast cancer patients. Results Higher degrees of genomic heterogeneity were observed in CTCs as compared to ctDNA. Several shared alterations present in CTCs and ctDNA were undetected in the primary tumor, highlighting the intra-tumoral heterogeneity of tumor components that were shed into systemic circulation. Accordingly, CTCs and ctDNA displayed higher degree of concordance with the metastatic tumor than the primary tumor. The alterations detected in circulation correlated with worse survival outcome for both lung and breast cancer patients emphasizing the impact of the metastatic phenotype. Notably, evolving genetic signatures were detected in the CTCs and ctDNA samples during the course of treatment and disease progression. Conclusions A standardized sample processing and data analysis workflow for concurrent analysis of CTCs and ctDNA successfully dissected the heterogeneity of metastatic tumor in circulation as well as the progressive genomic changes that may potentially guide the selection of appropriate therapy against evolving tumor clonality.

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