New method uses blood tests to accurately detect and monitor cancer, enabling early, noninvasive tracking.

Error-corrected flow-based sequencing at whole-genome scale and its application to circulating cell-free DNA profiling
Go to source). In the study, published in Nature Methods, the researchers benchmarked the cancer-detection performance of a new commercial sequencing platform from Ultima Genomics. They demonstrated that a low-cost platform such as this one enables a very high “depth” of coverage—a measure of the sequencing data quality—allowing investigators to detect extremely low concentrations of circulating tumor DNA. Adding an error-correcting method greatly improved the accuracy of the technique.
‘#Liquidbiopsies: Blood tests could be the future of catching #cancer early & tracking its progress! #cancercare’

“We’re now entering an era of low-cost DNA sequencing, and in this study, we took advantage of that to apply whole-genome sequencing techniques that in the past would have been considered wildly impractical,” said senior author Dr. Dan Landau, the Bibliowicz Family Professor of Medicine, and a member of the Englander Institute for Precision Medicine and the Sandra and Edward Meyer Cancer Center at Weill Cornell Medicine, and a core faculty member of the New York Genome Center.




Affordable Sequencing Enables Highly Accurate Cancer Detection
However, sensitively and accurately identifying the mutational signatures of cancer, just from tiny concentrations of tumor DNA in blood samples, has involved major challenges. The Landau laboratory for most of the past decade has been working to overcome these challenges using methods based on whole-genome sequencing—not just targeted sequencing of stretches of DNA where mutations are expected. In a study published last year, they showed that they could reliably detect advanced melanoma and lung cancer from patient blood samples, even without access to sequence data from tumor samples.In the new study, they took their approach a step further. First, they showed that the low cost of a new sequencing platform enables a depth of whole-genome sequencing that would have been prohibitively expensive with older technology. Using that platform alone, and having the known mutational patterns in patient tumors as a guide, they were able to detect tumor DNA in patient blood samples at concentrations in the part per million range. All samples in the study were collected after obtaining informed consent from the patients.
Next, the team enhanced the accuracy of this approach with an error-correction method that makes use of the redundant information in natural two-stranded DNA. They showed that the combined technique has extremely low error rates, making it feasible in principle to use on blood samples without also needing access to patient tumors.
Collaborating with other research teams, the researchers demonstrated the potential of this high-sensitivity, low-error approach by using it to detect and assess very low cancer levels in patients with bladder cancer and melanoma from blood samples alone.
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“We were able, for example, to see increases in circulating tumor DNA levels after treatment in patients with cancers that progressed or recurred, and declines in those levels in patients whose cancers had full or partial responses,” said first author Dr. Alexandre Cheng, a postdoctoral researcher in the Landau laboratory during the study.
Reference:
- Error-corrected flow-based sequencing at whole-genome scale and its application to circulating cell-free DNA profiling - (https://www.nature.com/articles/s41592-025-02648-9)
Source-Eurekalert