Significance of Distinct Liquid Biopsy Compartments in Evaluating Somatic Mutations for Targeted Therapy Selection in Cancer of Unknown Primary

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Fiona R Kolbinger - , University of Texas at Austin (Author)
  • Vincent Bernard - , University of Texas at Austin (Author)
  • Jaewon J Lee - , University of Texas at Austin (Author)
  • Bret M Stephens - , University of Texas at Austin (Author)
  • Vittorio Branchi - , University of Texas at Austin (Author)
  • Kanwal P S Raghav - , University of Texas at Austin (Author)
  • Anirban Maitra - , University of Texas at Austin (Author)
  • Paola A Guerrero - , University of Texas at Austin (Author)
  • Alexander Semaan - , University of Texas at Austin (Author)

Abstract

PURPOSE: Cancer of unknown primary (CUP) accounts for 2-5% of all cancer diagnoses, wherein standard investigations fail to reveal the original tumor site. Basket trials allocate targeted therapeutics based on actionable somatic mutations, independent of tumor entity. These trials, however, mostly rely on variants identified in tissue biopsies. Since liquid biopsies (LB) represent the overall tumor genomic landscape, they may provide an ideal diagnostic source in CUP patients. To identify the most informative liquid biopsy compartment, we compared the utility of genomic variant analysis for therapy stratification in two LB compartments (circulating cell-free (cf) and extracellular vesicle (ev) DNA).

METHODS: CfDNA and evDNA from 23 CUP patients were analyzed using a targeted gene panel covering 151 genes. Identified genetic variants were interpreted regarding diagnostic and therapeutic relevance using the MetaKB knowledgebase.

RESULTS: LB revealed a total of 22 somatic mutations in evDNA and/or cfDNA in 11/23 patients. Out of the 22 identified somatic variants, 14 are classified as Tier I druggable somatic variants. Comparison of variants identified in evDNA and cfDNA revealed an overlap of 58% of somatic variants in both LB compartments, whereas over 40% of variants were only found in one or the other compartment.

CONCLUSION: We observed substantial overlap between somatic variants identified in evDNA and cfDNA of CUP patients. Nonetheless, interrogation of both LB compartments can potentially increase the rate of druggable alterations, stressing the significance of liquid biopsies for possible primary-independent basket and umbrella trial inclusion.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1276-1285
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of gastrointestinal cancer
Volume54
Issue number4
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2023
Peer-reviewedYes
Externally publishedYes

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0003-2265-4809/work/149798332
Scopus 85149215032

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Humans, Neoplasms, Unknown Primary/drug therapy, DNA, Neoplasm/genetics, Liquid Biopsy, Cell-Free Nucleic Acids, Mutation