Clinical utility of plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA) in diffuse gliomas for the detection of IDH1 R132H mutation.
Swati SinghSupriya BhardwajIman DandapathJyotsna SinghSumanta DasTrishala MohanSantanu Kumar BoraShweta KediaAshish SuriMehar Chand SharmaChitra SarkarMohammed FaruqVaishali SuriPublished in: Pathology, research and practice (2024)
Liquid biopsy for CNS tumors is in its nascent phase, hindered by the low levels of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA). Overcoming this challenge requires highly sensitive molecular techniques. DD-PCR emerges as a standout technique due to its ability to identify rare mutations, copy number variations, and circulating nucleic acids, making it one of the best methods for identifying somatic mutations in cell-free DNA (cfDNA). Despite promising results from various studies demonstrating the feasibility of obtaining informative ctDNA profiles from liquid biopsy samples, challenges persist, including the need to standardize sample collection, storage, and processing methods, define clear assay positivity thresholds, and address the overall low assay sensitivity. Our two-phase study began by assessing DD-PCR efficacy in FFPE tissues, revealing robust concordance with immunohistochemistry. In Phase 1 (85 cases), DD-PCR on FFPE tissues demonstrated 100 % sensitivity and specificity for IDH1 R132H mutations. In Phase 2 (100 cases), analysis extended to cfDNA, maintaining high specificity (100 %) with moderate sensitivity (44.2 %). Overall concordance with immunohistochemistry was 61 %, highlighting liquid biopsy's potential in glioma management. The findings emphasized DD-PCR's clinical utility in both tissue and liquid biopsy, underscoring its role in early detection, diagnosis, and therapeutic monitoring of diffuse gliomas.
Keyphrases
- circulating tumor
- copy number
- low grade
- real time pcr
- ultrasound guided
- high grade
- cell free
- fine needle aspiration
- circulating tumor cells
- ionic liquid
- mitochondrial dna
- gene expression
- high throughput
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- high intensity
- single molecule
- structural basis
- mass spectrometry
- open label
- high resolution
- climate change
- living cells
- molecularly imprinted