Accurate detection of circulating tumor DNA using nanopore consensus sequencing

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Abstract

Levels of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in liquid biopsies may serve as a sensitive biomarker for real-time, minimally-invasive tumor diagnostics and monitoring. However, detecting ctDNA is challenging, as much fewer than 5% of the cell-free DNA in the blood typically originates from the tumor. To detect lowly abundant ctDNA molecules based on somatic variants, extremely sensitive sequencing methods are required. Here, we describe a new technique, CyclomicsSeq, which is based on Oxford Nanopore sequencing of concatenated copies of a single DNA molecule. Consensus calling of the DNA copies increased the base-calling accuracy ~60×, enabling accurate detection of TP53 mutations at frequencies down to 0.02%. We demonstrate that a TP53-specific CyclomicsSeq assay can be successfully used to monitor tumor burden during treatment for head-and-neck cancer patients. CyclomicsSeq can be applied to any genomic locus and offers an accurate diagnostic liquid biopsy approach that can be implemented in clinical workflows.

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APA

Marcozzi, A., Jager, M., Elferink, M., Straver, R., van Ginkel, J. H., Peltenburg, B., … de Ridder, J. (2021). Accurate detection of circulating tumor DNA using nanopore consensus sequencing. Npj Genomic Medicine, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41525-021-00272-y

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