Circulating tumor DNA reveals complex biological features with clinical relevance in metastatic breast cancer.
Aleix PratFara Brasó-MaristanyAdrienne G WaksEsther SanfeliuYouli XiaMeritxell Bellet-EzquerraPatricia GalvánDébora MartínezTomás PascualMercedes Marín-AguileraAnna RodríguezNuria ChicBarbara AdamoLaia ParéMaría Jesús Vidal LosadaMireia MargelíEster BallanaMarina Gómez-ReyMafalda OliveiraEudald FelipJudit MatitoRodrigo Sánchez-BayonaAnna SuñolCristina SauraEva CiruelosP Tolosa OrtegaMontserrat MuñozBlanca González-FarréPatricia VillagrasaJoel S ParkerCharles M PerouAna VivancosPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Liquid biopsy has proven valuable in identifying individual genetic alterations; however, the ability of plasma ctDNA to capture complex tumor phenotypes with clinical value is unknown. To address this question, we have performed 0.5X shallow whole-genome sequencing in plasma from 459 patients with metastatic breast cancer, including 245 patients treated with endocrine therapy and a CDK4/6 inhibitor (ET + CDK4/6i) from 2 independent cohorts. We demonstrate that machine learning multi-gene signatures, obtained from ctDNA, identify complex biological features, including measures of tumor proliferation and estrogen receptor signaling, similar to what is accomplished using direct tumor tissue DNA or RNA profiling. More importantly, 4 DNA-based subtypes, and a ctDNA-based genomic signature tracking retinoblastoma loss-of-heterozygosity, are significantly associated with poor response and survival outcome following ET + CDK4/6i, independently of plasma tumor fraction. Our approach opens opportunities for the discovery of additional multi-feature genomic predictors coming from ctDNA in breast cancer and other cancer-types.
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