Liquid biopsy: a new diagnostic modality

Author(s):  
Pranab Dey

The liquid biopsy is the most promising technology in the modern days. It plays a significant role in the diagnosis, management and finding out the minimal residual disease in carcinoma. There are three components of the liquid biopsy: circulating tumour cells (CTC), cell-free DNA (cf-DNA), and exosomes. These components carry vital information, and with the help of sophisticated technology, one can extract a large amount of data from them. The detection of the tumour-specific gene mutation in the CTC or cf-DNA may guide the clinicians about the selection of the appropriate chemotherapeutic agents. The liquid biopsy is still not applied for routine clinical use, and more research is needed in this field. In this review, the techniques and applications of liquid biopsy have been discussed.

1999 ◽  
Vol 123 (11) ◽  
pp. 1030-1034
Author(s):  
Stefan Faderl ◽  
Razelle Kurzrock ◽  
Zeev Estrov

Abstract In almost no other area of medical oncology has the introduction of new drugs, combinations of chemotherapeutic agents, and novel biologic treatments caused such dramatic responses as it has in the treatment of malignant hematologic disorders. However, despite some therapeutic success, many patients relapse and die from recurrence of their disease. The implications of minimal residual disease (MRD), a term referring to disease that is undetectable by conventional morphologic methods, have therefore attracted increasing attention in recent years. New and powerful laboratory tools such as polymerase chain reaction assays have extraordinary sensitivity and provide exciting new insights into the detection, nature, quantification, and kinetics of MRD. This article summarizes methods used in the identification of MRD and its importance as exemplified in the case of acute leukemias and chronic myelogenous leukemia.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelly M. Makielski ◽  
Alicia J. Donnelly ◽  
Ali Khammanivong ◽  
Milcah C. Scott ◽  
Andrea R. Ortiz ◽  
...  

AbstractOsteosarcoma has a guarded prognosis. A major hurdle in developing more effective osteosarcoma therapies is the lack of disease-specific biomarkers to predict risk, prognosis, or therapeutic response. Exosomes are secreted extracellular microvesicles emerging as powerful diagnostic tools. However, their clinical application is precluded by challenges in identifying disease-associated cargo from the vastly larger background of normal exosome cargo. We developed a method using canine osteosarcoma in mouse xenografts to distinguish tumor-derived from host-response exosomal mRNAs. The model allows for the identification of canine osteosarcoma-specific gene signatures by RNA sequencing and a species-differentiating bioinformatics pipeline. An osteosarcoma-associated signature consisting of five gene transcripts (SKA2, NEU1, PAF1, PSMG2, and NOB1) was validated in dogs with spontaneous osteosarcoma by qRT-PCR, while a machine learning model assigned dogs into healthy or disease groups. Serum/plasma exosomes were isolated from 53 dogs in distinct clinical groups (“healthy”, “osteosarcoma”, “other bone tumor”, or “non-neoplastic disease”). Pre-treatment samples from osteosarcoma cases were used as the training set and a validation set from post-treatment samples was used for testing, classifying as “osteosarcoma–detected” or “osteosarcoma–NOT detected”. Dogs in a validation set whose post-treatment samples were classified as “osteosarcoma–NOT detected” had longer remissions, up to 15 months after treatment. In conclusion, we identified a gene signature predictive of molecular remissions with potential applications in the early detection and minimal residual disease settings. These results provide proof-of-concept for our discovery platform and its utilization in future studies to inform cancer risk, diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutic response.


2021 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. S395-S396
Author(s):  
M.A. Gouda ◽  
M.J. Overman ◽  
H.J. Huang ◽  
J. Thomas ◽  
N.A. Dasari ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 544-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentino Conter ◽  
André Schrauder ◽  
Helmut Gadner ◽  
Maria Grazia Valsecchi ◽  
Martin Zimmermann ◽  
...  

Abstract Minimal residual disease (MRD), the most sensitive method to evaluate treatment response, has been adopted to stratify patients in study AIEOP-BFM ALL 2000. To assess whether PCR-MRD levels discriminate outcome in patients classified by WBC count, age at diagnosis, NCI criteria (Standard Risk, SR: WBC < 50,000/cmm and age 1–9 years; High Risk, HR: all others) and TEL/AML1 status. Between 07–2000 and 07–2006, 4,730 Ph-negative patients were enrolled in AIEOP-BFM ALL 2000 study. They were treated with BFM Induction (protocol IA) consolidation (protocol IB), extra-compartment/intensified consolidation (HD-MTX in non-HR patients, blocks in HR patients), reinduction therapy (one or more Protocols II or III), followed by maintainance. BM samples obtained at weeks 5 (Time Point 1, TP1) and 12 (TP2) of induction/consolidation therapy were used for PCR-based MRD analysis of patient specific gene targets. At least 2 sensitive markers (≥ 1 x 10−4) could be determined in 3,707 (78.4%) patients. SR was defined by MRD− at both TP1 and TP2; HR by MRD ≥1x10−3 at TP2; Intermediate Risk (IR): all others. Median follow-up was 3 years; 5-year percent EFS (SE) estimates are given.Patients at MRD-SR, IR or HR had, respectively, an EFS of 93.0 (1.0), 80.5 (1.5) and 43.4 (6.0) in patients with WBC <50,000/cmm vs 90.4 (2.6), 72.4 (3.0) and 47.0 (5.1) in patients with WBC ≥50,000/cmm. Patients at MRD SR, IR or HR had, respectively, EFS of 93.6 (1.0), 80.3 (1.5) and 44.1 (5.4) if aged 1–9 years vs 87.2 (3.4), 73.9 (3.0) and 49.3 (5.2) if aged ≥10 years. Patients at SR by NCI criteria [N= 2,355, EFS of 85.3 (1.0)] were stratified by PCR-MRD as SR (N=1046; 44.4%), IR (N=1198; 50.9%), or HR (N=111; 4.7%). EFS in these subgroups was 93.9 (1.0), 81.3 (1.6) and 43.9 (7.2), respectively (p<0.001). In patients at HR by NCI criteria [N=1,352, EFS of 75.6 (1.6)], 403 (29.8%), 774 (57.3%) and 175 (12.9%) respectively were at SR IR and HR by MRD. EFS was 89.4 (2.2) in MRD SR, 74.7 (2.3) in MRD IR and 47.9 (4.2) in MRD HR patients (p<0.001). Of 3,707 study patients, 3,410 were investigated for TEL/AML1 status: 771 (22.6%) were positive and 2,639 were negative. TEL/AML1+ patients were at SR (N=444; 57.6%) or IR (N=317; 41.1%) or HR (N=10; 1.3%) by PCR-MRD; EFS in this subgroup was 94.4% (1.5), 80% (3.7) and 60% (18.4), respectively (p<0.001). TEL/AML1− patients at SR (N=887; 33.6%) or IR (N=1497; 56.7%) or HR (N=255; 9.7%) had an EFS of 91.6% (1.3), 78.5% (1.4) and 45.7% (4.5), respectively (p<0.001). PCR-MRD in patients treated with BFM-oriented therapy overcomes the prognostic value of “historical” factors such as WBC count, age, NCI criteria or TEL/AML1 status, as it markedly discriminates prognosis within each subgroup defined by these variables. Study design for contemporary risk-directed therapy of childhood ALL should incorporate a technique for MRD determination.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-25
Author(s):  
Sehyun Shin

A liquid biopsy is a simple and non-invasive biopsy that examines a range of information about a tumor through a simple blood sample. Due to its non-invasive nature, liquid biopsy has many outstanding clinical benefits, including repetitive sampling and examination, representation of whole mutations, observation of minimal residual disease etc. However, liquid biopsy requires various processes such as sample preparation, amplification, and target detection. These processes can be integrated onto microfluidic platforms, which may provide a sample-to-answer system. The present review provides a brief overview of liquid biopsies, a detailed review of the technologies in each process, and prospective concluding remarks. Through this review, one can have a basic but cross-disciplinary understanding of liquid biopsy, as well as knowledge of new starting points for future research in each related area.


Blood ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 99 (7) ◽  
pp. 2315-2323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomasz Szczepański ◽  
Marja J. Willemse ◽  
Bas Brinkhof ◽  
Elisabeth R. van Wering ◽  
Mirjam van der Burg ◽  
...  

Immunoglobulin (Ig) and T-cell receptor (TCR) gene rearrangements are excellent patient-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) targets for detection of minimal residual disease (MRD) in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), but they might be unstable during the disease course. Therefore, we performed detailed molecular studies in 96 childhood precursor-B–ALL at diagnosis and at relapse (n = 91) or at presumably secondary acute myeloid leukemia (n = 5). Clonal Ig and TCR targets for MRD detection were identified in 94 patients, with 71% of these targets being preserved at relapse. The best stability was found for IGK-Kde rearrangements (90%), followed byTCRG (75%), IGH (64%), and incompleteTCRD rearrangements (63%). Combined Southern blot and PCR data for IGH, IGK-Kde, and TCRDgenes showed significant differences in stability at relapse between monoclonal and oligoclonal rearrangements: 89% versus 40%, respectively. In 38% of patients all MRD-PCR targets were preserved at relapse, and in 40% most of the targets (≥ 50%) were preserved. In 22% of patients most targets (10 cases) or all targets (10 cases) were lost at relapse. The latter 10 cases included 4 patients with secondary acute myeloid leukemia with germline Ig/TCR genes. In 5 other patients additional analyses proved the clonal relationship between both disease stages. Finally, in 1 patient all Ig/TCR gene rearrangements were completely different between diagnosis and relapse, which is suggestive of secondary ALL. Based on the presented data, we propose stepwise strategies for selection of stable PCR targets for MRD monitoring, which should enable successful detection of relapse in most (95%) of childhood precursor-B–ALL.


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