Can circulating tumor DNA be used for direct and early stage cancer detection?

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Abstract

In the August 16th issue of Science Translational Medicine, Phallen et al propose a method for early cancer diagnosis by using circulating tumor DNA (1). One major advance of this paper includes optimized sequencing of cell-free/circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) without knowledge of tumor mutations. Evaluation of 200 patients with colorectal, breast, lung and ovarian cancer revealed mutations in ctDNA in approx. 60-70% of all patients, including stage 1 and stage 2 disease. If this data can be reproduced in asymptomatic individuals, they will likely have a major impact on early cancer detection and patient outcomes. In this commentary, we examine the feasibility of this approach for detecting small, asymptomatic tumors, based on previously published empirical data.

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Diamandis, E. P., & Fiala, C. (2017). Can circulating tumor DNA be used for direct and early stage cancer detection? F1000Research. F1000 Research Ltd. https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.13440.1

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