Circulating Tumor DNA-Based Disease Monitoring of Patients with Locally Advanced Esophageal Cancer

Author:

Hofste Lisa S. M.,Geerlings Maartje J.,von Rhein Daniel,Tolmeijer Sofie H.ORCID,Weiss Marjan M.ORCID,Gilissen Christian,Hofste Tom,Garms Linda M.,Janssen Marcel J. R.,Rütten Heidi,Rosman Camiel,van der Post Rachel S.,Klarenbeek Bastiaan R.,Ligtenberg Marjolijn J. L.ORCID

Abstract

Patients diagnosed with locally advanced esophageal cancer are often treated with neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery. This study explored whether detection of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in plasma can be used to predict residual disease during treatment. Diagnostic tissue biopsies from patients with esophageal cancer receiving neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and surgery were analyzed for tumor-specific mutations. These tumor-informed mutations were used to measure the presence of ctDNA in serially collected plasma samples using hybrid capture-based sequencing. Plasma samples were obtained before chemoradiotherapy, and prior to surgery. The association between ctDNA detection and progression-free and overall survival was measured. Before chemoradiotherapy, ctDNA was detected in 56% (44/78) of patients and detection was associated with tumor stage and volume (p = 0.05, Fisher exact and p = 0.02, Mann-Whitney, respectively). After chemoradiotherapy, ctDNA was detected in 10% (8/78) of patients. This preoperative detection of ctDNA was independently associated with recurrent disease (hazard ratio 2.8, 95% confidence interval 1.1–6.8, p = 0.03, multivariable Cox-regression) and worse overall survival (hazard ratio 2.9, 95% confidence interval 1.2–7.1, p = 0.02, multivariable Cox-regression).Ultradeep sequencing-based detection of ctDNA in preoperative plasma of patients with locally advanced esophageal cancer may help to assess which patients have a high risk of recurrence after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and surgery.

Funder

Bergh in het Zadel foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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