Clinical utility of plasma cell-free DNA in pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms Journal Article


Authors: Cowzer, D.; Shah, R. H.; Chou, J. F.; Kundra, R.; Punn, S.; Fiedler, L.; DeMore, A.; Capanu, M.; Berger, M. F.; Reidy-Lagunes, D.; Raj, N.
Article Title: Clinical utility of plasma cell-free DNA in pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms
Abstract: In advanced pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms (PanNEN), there are little data detailing the frequency of genetic alterations identified in cell free DNA (cfDNA), plasma-tissue concordance of detected alterations, and clinical utility of cfDNA. Patients with metastatic PanNENs underwent cfDNA collection in routine practice. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) of cfDNA and matched tissue when available was performed. Clinical actionability of variants was annotated by OncoKB. Thirty-two cfDNA samples were analyzed from 25 patients, the majority who had well-differentiated intermediate grade disease (13/25; 52%). Genomic alterations were detected in 68% of patients and in 66% of all cfDNA samples. The most frequently altered genes were DAXX (28%), TSC2 (24%), MEN1 (24%), ARID1B (20%), ARID1A (12%), and ATRX (12%). Twenty-three out of 25 (92%) patients underwent tumor tissue NGS. Tissue-plasma concordance for select genes was as follows:DAXX (95.7%), ARID1A (91.1%), ATRX (87%), TSC2 (82.6%), MEN1 (69.6%). Potentially actionable alterations were identified in cfDNA of 8 patients, including TSC2 (4; level 3b), ATM (1; level 3b), ARID1A (2; level 4), and KRAS (1; level 4). An ETV6:NTRK fusion detected in tumor tissue was treated with larotrectinib; at progression, sequencing of cfDNA identified an NTRK3 G623R alteration as the acquired mechanism of resistance; the patient enrolled in a clinical trial of a second-generation TRK inhibitor with clinical benefit. In metastatic PanNENs, cfDNA-based NGS identified tumor-associated mutations in 66% of plasma samples with a high level of plasma-tissue agreement in PanNEN-associated genes. Clonal evolution, actionable alterations, and resistance mechanisms were detected through circulating cfDNA genotyping.
Keywords: genetics; mutation; pancreatic neoplasms; neuroendocrine tumor; pancreas tumor; genomics; genome; neuroendocrine tumors; next generation sequencing; high throughput sequencing; high-throughput nucleotide sequencing; humans; human; pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms; precision oncology; cell-free dna; cell-free nucleic acids; cell free nucleic acid; circulating-tumor dna
Journal Title: Endocrine-Related Cancer
Volume: 31
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1351-0088
Publisher: Bioscientifica Ltd  
Date Published: 2024-01-01
Language: English
DOI: 10.1530/erc-23-0292
PUBMED: 38252063
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Joanne Fu-Lou Chou
    331 Chou
  2. Marinela Capanu
    385 Capanu
  3. Diane Lauren Reidy
    294 Reidy
  4. Michael Forman Berger
    764 Berger
  5. Ronak Hasmukh Shah
    72 Shah
  6. Nitya Prabhakar Raj
    106 Raj
  7. Ritika   Kundra
    88 Kundra
  8. Darren Cowzer
    29 Cowzer
  9. April Nicole DeMore
    9 DeMore
  10. Sippy Punn
    5 Punn