Increased blood draws for ultrasensitive ctDNA and CTCs detection in early breast cancer patients

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Abstract

Early breast cancer patients often experience relapse due to residual disease after treatment. Liquid biopsy is a methodology capable of detecting tumor components in blood, but low concentrations at early stages pose challenges. To detect them, next-generation sequencing has promise but entails complex processes. Exploring larger blood volumes could overcome detection limitations. Herein, a total of 282 high-volume plasma and blood-cell samples were collected for dual ctDNA/CTCs detection using a single droplet-digital PCR assay per patient. ctDNA and/or CTCs were detected in 100% of pre-treatment samples. On the other hand, post-treatment positive samples exhibited a minimum variant allele frequency of 0.003% for ctDNA and minimum cell number of 0.069 CTCs/mL of blood, surpassing previous investigations. Accurate prediction of residual disease before surgery was achieved in patients without a complete pathological response. A model utilizing ctDNA dynamics achieved an area under the ROC curve of 0.92 for predicting response. We detected disease recurrence in blood in the three patients who experienced a relapse, anticipating clinical relapse by 34.61, 9.10, and 7.59 months. This methodology provides an easily implemented alternative for ultrasensitive residual disease detection in early breast cancer patients.

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Alba-Bernal, A., Godoy-Ortiz, A., Domínguez-Recio, M. E., López-López, E., Quirós-Ortega, M. E., Sánchez-Martín, V., … Alba, E. (2024). Increased blood draws for ultrasensitive ctDNA and CTCs detection in early breast cancer patients. Npj Breast Cancer, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41523-024-00642-6

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