Pan-cancer circulating tumor DNA detection in over 10,000 Chinese patients.
Yongliang ZhangYu YaoYaping XuLifeng LiYan GongKai ZhangMeng ZhangYanfang GuanLianpeng ChangXuefeng XiaLin LiShuqin JiaQiang ZengPublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) provides a noninvasive approach to elucidate a patient's genomic landscape and actionable information. Here, we design a ctDNA-based study of over 10,000 pan-cancer Chinese patients. Using parallel sequencing between plasma and white blood cells, 14% of plasma cell-free DNA samples contain clonal hematopoiesis (CH) variants, for which detectability increases with age. After eliminating CH variants, ctDNA is detected in 73.5% of plasma samples, with small cell lung cancer (91.1%) and prostate cancer (87.9%) showing the highest detectability. The landscape of putative driver genes revealed by ctDNA profiling is similar to that in a tissue-based database (R2 = 0.87, p < 0.001) but also shows some discrepancies, such as higher EGFR (44.8% versus 25.2%) and lower KRAS (6.8% versus 27.2%) frequencies in non-small cell lung cancer, and a higher TP53 frequency in hepatocellular carcinoma (53.1% versus 28.6%). Up to 41.2% of plasma samples harbor drug-sensitive alterations. These findings may be helpful for identifying therapeutic targets and combined treatment strategies.
Keyphrases
- circulating tumor
- small cell lung cancer
- cell free
- circulating tumor cells
- prostate cancer
- single cell
- papillary thyroid
- copy number
- squamous cell
- case report
- genome wide
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- induced apoptosis
- healthcare
- room temperature
- dna methylation
- emergency department
- gene expression
- cell cycle arrest
- adverse drug
- tyrosine kinase
- lymph node metastasis
- transcription factor
- single molecule
- pi k akt