Liquid biopsy helps indicate genetic mutations that cause disease resistance during the course of the treatment.
Liquid biopsies or blood tests that detect circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), may not only sound an early alert that a treatment's effect is diminishing, but may also help explain why -sometimes offering clues about what to do next. Why a //cancer treatment is losing its effectiveness, is a question that preoccupies every patient and their doctor. But checking in on a drug's tumor-fighting progress is not easy - usually involving invasive biopsies and expensive scans.
‘Circulating tumor in the blood of patients with gastrointestinal cancer was analysed for genetic mutations which might indicate disease resistance.’
"We have shown that integrating regular liquid biopsies into our patients' routine care is feasible and easily incorportated into clinical practice," said study investigator Aparna Parikh, MD, from Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, in Boston, Massachusetts. "This technology can precisely help us understand each patient's individual disease course and allows us to tailor care based on an understanding of their specific disease biology," she said.
In fact, compared to standard tissue biopsies, which can be painful and difficult to obtain, her study showed that liquid biopsies actually provided more information less invasively.
The study involved nearly 40 patients with various forms of gastro-intestinal (GI) cancers, who had initially responded to therapy but then stopped.
Liquid biopsies were done when their disease began to progress and ctDNA in the blood was analysed for genetic mutations that might be making them resistant to treatment.
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"Identifying what specific mutations are responsible for treatment resistance is very important in helping clinicians choosing what treatment path a patient should try next, whether it be another drug or perhaps radiation," explained Parikh.
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"We have shown this approach is feasible across many different GI cancers," she noted. "The next step is to study how best to use this new technology in daily practice. It's important for clinicians to understand its utility as well as its limitations."
Commenting on the study, ESMO spokesperson Frederica Di Nicolantonio, MD, from the Candiolo Cancer Institute and University of Torino in Italy said, "this work elegantly reports that the use of clinical liquid biopsy panels can effectively identify multiple heterogeneous and co-occuring mechanisms of acquired drug resistance, all in a non-invasive manner. Clinicians should be able to better individualise patient care based on results from this technology."
Source-Eurekalert