Journal Article10.1038/s41598-024-73952-1
Evaluation of blood MSI burden dynamics to trace immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy efficacy through the course of treatment
Egor M. Veselovsky,Alexandra Lebedeva,Olesya Kuznetsova,Daria Kravchuk,Ekaterina Belova,Anastasia Taraskina,Tatiana A. Grigoreva,A.I. Kavun,Victoria Yudina,Laima Belyaeva,Vladislav Nikulin,V. Mileyko,Alexey Tryakin,M. Fedyanin,Maxim Ivanov +14 more
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TL;DR: This study evaluates the dynamics of blood microsatellite instability (MSI) burden in colorectal cancer patients undergoing immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy, finding a correlation between MSI changes and treatment outcomes, suggesting MSI as a potential predictive biomarker.
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Abstract: Analysis of serial liquid biopsy (LB) samples has been found to be a promising approach for the monitoring of tumor dynamics in the course of therapy for patients with colorectal cancer (CRC). Currently, somatic mutations are used for tracing the dynamics of the tumor via LB. However, the analysis of the dynamic changes in the molecular signatures such as microsatellite instability (MSI) is not currently used. We hypothesized that changes in blood MSI burden (bMSI) could be registered using serial LB sampling in the course of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI), and that its changes could potentially correlate with treatment outcomes. We report the preliminary findings of the observational trial launched to study (NCT06414304) the dynamics of bMSI in 9 MSI-positive CRC patients receiving ICI. NGS-based MSI testing was performed on both pre-treatment FFPE and serial LB samples. For patients who had detectable bMSI burden in any of the LB samples (n = 8, 89%), median bMSI was 1.4% (range, 0.01-40%). Among patients with detectable MSI in available FFPE samples, median MSI burden was 29.3% (range, 10–40%). bMSI detected in baseline LB and FFPE samples were positively correlated (Pearson’s R 0.47). Maximal variant allele frequencies of driver mutations observed in LB were also positively correlated with bMSI burden (Pearson’s R 0.7). Patients who had clinical benefit had undetectable bMSI burden at follow-up. Our results provide the rationale for further validation of bMSI as a predictive biomarker of ICI in MSI-positive patients.
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Liquid biopsy in gastrointestinal oncology: clinical applications and translational integration of ctDNA, CTCs, and sEVs
Rita Palieri,Maria De Luca,Francesco Balestra,Claudio Lotesoriere,Federica Rizzi,Angela Dalia Ricci,Rita Mastrogiacomo,Maria Lucia Curri,Gianluigi Giannelli,Nicoletta Depalo,Maria Principia Scavo +10 more
Abstract: Background and aims Liquid biopsy offers a minimally invasive tool to detect actionable mutations, monitor minimal residual disease (MRD), and guide therapy in gastrointestinal (GI) cancers. We critically review the clinical utility of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), circulating tumor cells (CTCs), and small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) across GI malignancies and propose a framework for their integration into clinical practice. Methods We synthesized evidence from over 200 studies, including prospective trials and translational research, to assess diagnostic accuracy, prognostic value, and clinical actionability of each biomarker type in esophageal, gastric, colorectal, pancreatic, hepatocellular, and biliary cancers. Results ctDNA has shown strong potential for MRD detection and treatment monitoring, particularly in colorectal and pancreatic cancer. CTCs offer insights into metastatic risk and therapeutic resistance, while sEVs provide molecular cargo relevant to immunomodulation and disease progression. Emerging microfluidics and AI-driven multi-omics approaches may overcome current limitations. Conclusion The integration of liquid biopsy technologies into GI oncology holds promise for early detection and precision therapy. We propose a five-phase clinical roadmap and outine the key research gaps that need to be addressed before widespread implementation in routine care.
Advances in Hereditary Colorectal Cancer: How Precision Medicine Is Changing the Game
Sheng-Hao Lin,Chenxi Zhou,Hanlin Chen,Xinlei Zhou,Leitao Sun,Le-Yin Zhang,Yuxin Zhang +6 more
TL;DR: Precision medicine advances in hereditary colorectal cancer (HCRC) include AI-assisted molecular diagnostics, imaging technology, and non-invasive monitoring solutions, enabling early detection, tailored treatment, and improved patient outcomes through genomics, transcriptomics, and microbiome analysis.
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