Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Diagnostic Utility of Next-Generation Sequencing in Circulating Free DNA and a Comparison With Matched Tissue in Gallbladder Carcinoma.

Mutation detection for therapy monitoring in cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is used clinically for some malignancies. Gallbladder carcinoma (GBC) presents a diagnostic challenge and has limited late-stage treatment options. To our knowledge, this novel study examines, for the first time, genomic alterations in cfDNA from GBC to assess diagnostic accuracy and therapeutic options. The concordance of somatic genomic changes in cfDNA and DNA from paired tumor tissue was analyzed. Paired serum and tissue samples from 40 histologically proven GBC, 20 cholecystitis, and 4 normal (noninflamed gallbladder) controls were included. Targeted next-generation sequencing with a 22-gene panel (Colon and Lung Cancer Research Panel v2, Thermo Scientific) in cfDNA and tumor tissue with high depth and uniform coverage on ION Personal Genome Machine (ION, PGM) was performed. A spectrum of 223 mutations in cfDNA and 225 mutations in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue DNA were identified in 22 genes. Mutations ranged from 1 to 17 per case. In cfDNA frequent alterations were in TP53 (85.0%), EGFR (52.5%), MET (35%) CTNNB1, SMAD4, BRAF (32.5%), PTEN (30%), FGFR3 and PIK3CA (27.5%), NOTCH1 (25.0%), and FBXW7 and ERBB4 (22.5%). At least one clinically actionable mutation was identified in all cfDNA samples. Paired samples shared 149 of 225 genetic abnormalities (66.2%). Individual gene mutation concordance ranged from 44.44% to 82.0% and was highest for EGFR (82.0%), BRAF and NOTCH1 (80.0%), TP53 (73.08%), MET (72.22%), and ERBB4 (71.42%) with a significant level of correlation (Spearman r = 0.91, P ≤ .0001). The sensitivity and specificity of the TP53 gene at the gene level was the highest (94.44% and 100.0%, respectively). Overall survival was higher for ERBB4 and ERBB2 mutant tumors. The adenocarcinoma subtype revealed specific genetic changes in ERBB4, SMAD4, ERBB2, PTEN, KRAS, and NRAS. NGS-based cfDNA mutation profiling can be used to diagnose GBC before surgery to guide treatment decisions. Targeted therapy identified in GBC included SMAD4, ERBB2, ERBB4, EGFR, KRAS, BRAF, PIK3CA, MET, and NRAS.

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