Circulating tumor DNA-based molecular residual disease detection for treatment monitoring in advanced melanoma patients

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Abstract

Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have substantially improved overall survival in patients with advanced melanoma; however, the lack of biomarkers to monitor treatment response and relapse remains an important clinical challenge. Thus, a reliable biomarker is needed that can risk-stratify patients for disease recurrence and predict response to treatment. Methods: A retrospective analysis using a personalized, tumor-informed circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) assay on prospectively collected plasma samples (n = 555) from 69 patients with advanced melanoma was performed. Patients were divided into three cohorts: cohort A (N = 30), stage III patients receiving adjuvant ICI/observation; cohort B (N = 29), unresectable stage III/IV patients receiving ICI therapy; and cohort C (N = 10), stage III/IV patients on surveillance after planned completion of ICI therapy for metastatic disease. Results: In cohort A, compared to molecular residual disease (MRD)-negative patients, MRD-positivity was associated with significantly shorter distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS; hazard ratio [HR], 10.77; p =.01). Increasing ctDNA levels from the post-surgical or pre-treatment time point to after 6 weeks of ICI were predictive of shorter DMFS in cohort A (HR, 34.54; p

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Eroglu, Z., Krinshpun, S., Kalashnikova, E., Sudhaman, S., Ozturk Topcu, T., Nichols, M., … Aleshin, A. (2023). Circulating tumor DNA-based molecular residual disease detection for treatment monitoring in advanced melanoma patients. Cancer, 129(11), 1723–1734. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.34716

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