[HTML][HTML] Beyond the blood: CSF-derived cfDNA for diagnosis and characterization of CNS tumors

AE McEwen, SES Leary, CM Lockwood - Frontiers in cell and …, 2020 - frontiersin.org
AE McEwen, SES Leary, CM Lockwood
Frontiers in cell and developmental biology, 2020frontiersin.org
Genetic data are rapidly becoming part of tumor classification and are integral to prognosis
and predicting response to therapy. Current molecular tumor profiling relies heavily on
tissue resection or biopsy. Tissue profiling has several disadvantages in tumors of the
central nervous system, including the challenge associated with invasive biopsy, the
heterogeneous nature of many malignancies where a small biopsy can underrepresent the
mutational profile, and the frequent lack of obtaining a repeat biopsy, which limits routine …
Genetic data are rapidly becoming part of tumor classification and are integral to prognosis and predicting response to therapy. Current molecular tumor profiling relies heavily on tissue resection or biopsy. Tissue profiling has several disadvantages in tumors of the central nervous system, including the challenge associated with invasive biopsy, the heterogeneous nature of many malignancies where a small biopsy can underrepresent the mutational profile, and the frequent lack of obtaining a repeat biopsy, which limits routine monitoring to assess therapy response and/or tumor evolution. Circulating tumor, cell-free DNA (cfDNA), has been proposed as a liquid biopsy to address some limitations of tissue-based genetics. In cancer patients, a portion of cfDNA is tumor-derived and may contain somatic genetic alterations. In central nervous system (CNS) neoplasia, plasma tumor-derived cfDNA is very low or absent, likely due to the blood brain barrier. Interrogating cfDNA in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has several advantages. Compared to blood, CSF is paucicellular and therefore predominantly lacks non-tumor cfDNA; however, patients with CNS-limited tumors have significantly enriched tumor-derived cfDNA in CSF. In patients with metastatic CNS disease, mutations in CSF cfDNA are most concordant with the intracranial process. CSF cfDNA can also occasionally uncover additional genetic alterations absent in concurrent biopsy specimens, reflecting tumor heterogeneity. Although CSF is enriched for tumor-derived cfDNA, absolute quantities are low. Highly sensitive, targeted methods including next-generation sequencing and digital PCR are required to detect mutations in CSF cfDNA. Additional technical and bioinformatic approaches also facilitate enhanced ability to detect tumor mutations in CSF cfDNA.
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