Cell-free circulating tumor DNA for noninvasive molecular profiling among patients undergoing definitive chemoradiation for locally advanced lung cancer Research Letter


Authors: Lebow, E. S.; Eichholz, J.; Boe, L.; Zhang, Z.; Kratochvil, L. B.; Gelblum, D. Y.; Simone, C. B. 2nd; Shepherd, A. F.; Iyengar, P.; Shin, J. Y.; Rimner, A.; Li, B. T.; Isbell, J. M.; Shaverdian, N.; Thor, M. T.; Gomez, D. R.
Title: Cell-free circulating tumor DNA for noninvasive molecular profiling among patients undergoing definitive chemoradiation for locally advanced lung cancer
Abstract: Purpose: We prospectively explored the utility of liquid biopsy for cell-free circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) as a prognostic and predictive biomarker in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with definitive chemoradiation therapy. Methods and Materials: This prospective clinical cohort consisted of patients with unresectable, locally advanced NSCLC who had liquid biopsy testing before initiation of cancer therapy. Liquid biopsy testing was performed using an institutional assay that included 129 genes and paired white blood cell sequencing. Variant allele frequency was defined as the proportion of mutant alleles at a particular genetic locus. A US Food and Drug Administration-recognized database (OncoKB) was used to classify alterations. We evaluated progression-free survival from the start of radiation therapy using the log-rank test. Results: Among 25 patients with prospective testing of ctDNA levels before therapy initiation, 18 patients had adenocarcinoma (72%), 7 patients had squamous cell carcinoma (28%), and 23 (92%) were former or current smokers. Twelve patients (48%) received adjuvant durvalumab. The median radiation dose was 60 Gy in 30 fractions (range, 55-66 Gy in 20-33 fractions). Seventy-six percent of patients (n = 18) had one or more alterations detected (median, 3 alterations, range, 1-8), including genomic markers of radiation response in 3 patients. The most common driver alteration detected was KRAS mutation in 24% of the cohort (n = 6). The detection of ctDNA levels was significantly associated with pretreatment 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography standardized uptake value metrics, and the association was strengthened by integrating the number of mutations (compared with variant allele frequency) as the outcome variable. Among patients with baseline detectable ctDNA levels, the median progression-free survival was 21.3 months and was not reached among patients without baseline ctDNA level detection (hazard ratio, 4.54, P = .04). Conclusions: Prospective liquid biopsy testing among patients treated with definitive chemoradiation therapy identifies driver alterations and markers of radiation response with direct implications for therapy personalization. © 2025
Journal Title: Advances in Radiation Oncology
Volume: 10
Issue: 4
ISSN: 2452-1094
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2025-04-01
Start Page: 101727
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.adro.2025.101727
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11982964
PUBMED: 40213312
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- MSK corresponding author is Daniel Gomez -- MSK author Maria Thor's listed with the wrong middle initial on the original publication -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Zhigang Zhang
    428 Zhang
  2. Daphna Y Gelblum
    227 Gelblum
  3. Daniel R Gomez
    237 Gomez
  4. Andreas Rimner
    524 Rimner
  5. Maria Elisabeth Thor
    149 Thor
  6. Bob Tingkan Li
    278 Li
  7. James Michael Isbell
    127 Isbell
  8. Annemarie Fernandes Shepherd
    103 Shepherd
  9. Charles Brian Simone
    190 Simone
  10. Emily Schapira Lebow
    49 Lebow
  11. Jacob Y Shin
    25 Shin
  12. Lillian Augusta Boe
    66 Boe
  13. Puneeth Iyengar
    41 Iyengar