Circulating tumour DNA: analytical aspects and clinical applications for metastatic melanoma patients.

Ann Biol Clin (Paris)

Laboratoire de biochimie, Plateforme de génétique moléculaire des cancers, CHU de Nantes, Nantes, France, Centre de recherche en cancérologie et immunologie, Inserm U 1232, Nantes, France.

Published: December 2017

The management of metastatic melanoma has evolved since the onset of treatments with BRAF inhibitors. In order to predict which patients are likely to respond to these treatments, the therapeutic strategy is now conditioned by the search for the activating mutations of the BRAF gene. Tumor genotyping is routinely performed from DNA extracted from tissue or cellular specimens from the primary tumor, metastases, or neoplastic effusions. Due to their invasiveness, these specimens are rarely repeated during the management. In addition, the analysis of the tumor material requires a pretreatment of the sample (formalin fixation, paraffin inclusion, preparation of tissue sections) and may take up to several weeks, making emergency treatment with BRAF inhibitors impossible. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), released by cancer cells in the blood stream, appears as an alternative to tissue sampling. The pre-analytical conditions are now well defined, and several technological approaches can be used to demonstrate the desired molecular alterations. ctDNA is less affected by tumor heterogeneity, can be collected in a minimally invasive manner and analyzed rapidly. Furthermore, ctDNA can be repeatedly analyzed during follow-up, which makes it possible to envisage its use as a specific tumor marker, in order to monitor the response to the treatment and to detect treatment failure.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1684/abc.2017.1305DOI Listing

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