ESMO recommendations on the use of circulating tumour DNA assays for patients with cancer: A report from the ESMO Precision Medicine Working Group Guidelines


Authors: Pascual, J.; Attard, G.; Bidard, F. C.; Curigliano, G.; De Mattos-Arruda, L.; Diehn, M.; Italiano, A.; Lindberg, J.; Merker, J. D.; Montagut, C.; Normanno, N.; Pantel, K.; Pentheroudakis, G.; Popat, S.; Reis-Filho, J. S.; Tie, J.; Seoane, J.; Tarazona, N.; Yoshino, T.; Turner, N. C.
Title: ESMO recommendations on the use of circulating tumour DNA assays for patients with cancer: A report from the ESMO Precision Medicine Working Group
Abstract: Circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) assays conducted on plasma are rapidly developing a strong evidence base for use in patients with cancer. The European Society for Medical Oncology convened an expert working group to review the analytical and clinical validity and utility of ctDNA assays. For patients with advanced cancer, validated and adequately sensitive ctDNA assays have utility in identifying actionable mutations to direct targeted therapy, and may be used in routine clinical practice, provided the limitations of the assays are taken into account. Tissue-based testing remains the preferred test for many cancer patients, due to limitations of ctDNA assays detecting fusion events and copy number changes, although ctDNA assays may be routinely used when faster results will be clinically important, or when tissue biopsies are not possible or inappropriate. Reflex tumour testing should be considered following a non-informative ctDNA result, due to false-negative results with ctDNA testing. In patients treated for early-stage cancers, detection of molecular residual disease or molecular relapse, has high evidence of clinical validity in anticipating future relapse in many cancers. Molecular residual disease/molecular relapse detection cannot be recommended in routine clinical practice, as currently there is no evidence for clinical utility in directing treatment. Additional potential applications of ctDNA assays, under research development and not recommended for routine practice, include identifying patients not responding to therapy with early dynamic changes in ctDNA levels, monitoring therapy for the development of resistance mutations before clinical progression, and in screening asymptomatic people for cancer. Recommendations for reporting of results, future development of ctDNA assays and future clinical research are made. © 2022 The Authors
Keywords: gene mutation; genetics; mutation; cancer recurrence; advanced cancer; cancer growth; cancer patient; sensitivity analysis; clinical practice; colorectal cancer; neoplasm recurrence, local; breast cancer; cancer screening; lung cancer; tumor biopsy; tumor marker; cancer resistance; prostate cancer; false negative result; germ line; minimal residual disease; early cancer; tumor recurrence; hematopoiesis; validity; false positive result; dna determination; upper gastrointestinal tract; personalized medicine; gastrointestinal cancer; genotyping; copy number variation; procedures; humans; human; article; precision medicine; circulating tumor dna; liquid biopsy; biomarkers, tumor; malignant neoplasm; circulating tumour dna (ctdna)
Journal Title: Annals of Oncology
Volume: 33
Issue: 8
ISSN: 0923-7534
Publisher: Oxford University Press  
Date Published: 2022-08-01
Start Page: 750
End Page: 768
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.annonc.2022.05.520
PUBMED: 35809752
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 September 2022 -- Source: Scopus
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