New test could predict lung cancer outcomes using tumor DNA

· News-Medical

Scientists from the Francis Crick Institute, UCL, UCLH and Personalis have found that a test to detect circulating tumor DNA can predict lung cancer outcome in a Cancer Research UK-funded study.

Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is fragments of DNA released into the blood by tumors. It's known to be important for disease prognosis but can be difficult to measure precisely.

They applied the platform to blood plasma samples from 171 people with early-stage lung cancer in the TRACERx cohort, finding that people with a low level of ctDNA before surgery were less likely to relapse and had improved overall survival rates than people with a high level of ctDNA.

The high sensitivity of the test meant that smaller amounts of ctDNA could be detected, which prevented people with a lower amount of ctDNA from being incorrectly labelled ctDNA negative.

James Black, Postdoctoral Clinical Fellow at the Francis Crick Institute and the CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence at UCL, said: "We've shown that the presence or absence of tumor DNA in the blood was strongly predictive of prognosis. ctDNA testing, especially using ultrasensitive platforms, could help clinicians make more informed decisions about treatment and give patients a more accurate idea of how their disease might progress. More research to validate these tests will help to get them on the agenda for regular clinical use."

Richard Chen, Chief Medical Officer and Executive Vice President of R&D at Personalis, said: "We designed NeXT Personal to detect residual or recurrent cancer in its earliest stages, and this study shows the clinical importance of that ultra-sensitive detection in early-stage lung cancer. A more sensitive test like NeXT Personal offers the potential of earlier detection and earlier treatment for patients. Similarly, as we see in this study, a negative test can potentially reassure patients, and offer the hope of avoiding unnecessary therapy in the future."

The kind of test used in NeXT Personal can help us move toward an age of personalized medicine, ensuring clinicians can get the right treatment to the right people by accurately sorting them into groups based on what their disease is likely to do. The test can help to improve quality of life and survival by ensuring clinicians can go all-in for people whose disease is more likely to come back after treatment, while sparing people difficult treatments they might not need if their disease is less risky. More research is needed, but the study takes us a step closer to a day where treatments can be tailored to patients. The next chapter in TRACERx, TRACERx EVO, is now recruiting people to join the study and will be looking even deeper into the biology of lung cancer." Marianne Baker, Research Information Manager at Cancer Research UKTRACERx is our flagship lung cancer research study, tracking the disease's evolution over time. As a hard-to-treat cancer, the more we understand about its progression, the better equipped we are to beat it.

The study is supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research UCLH Biomedical Research Centre.

Source:

The Francis Crick Institute

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