Purpose: For precision medicine, exploration and monitoring of molecular biomarkers are essential. However, in advanced gastric cancer (GC) with visceral lesions, an invasive procedure cannot be performed repeatedly for the follow-up of molecular biomarkers.

Materials And Methods: To verify the clinical implication of serial liquid biopsies targeting circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) on treatment response, we conducted targeted deep sequencing for serially collected ctDNA of 15 HER2-positive metastatic GC patients treated with anti-PD-1 inhibitor in combination with standard systemic treatment.

Results: In the baseline ctDNAs, 14 patients (93%) harbored more than one genetic alteration. A number of mutations in well-known cancer-related genes, such as and , were identified. Copy number alterations were identified in eight GCs (53.3%), and amplification of the gene (6/15, 40.0%) was the most recurrent. When we calculated the mean variant allele frequency (VAF) of mutations in each ctDNA as the molecular tumor burden index (mTBI), the mTBI trend was largely consistent with the VAF profiles in both responder and non-responder groups. Notably, in the longitudinal analysis of ctDNA, mTBI provided 2-42 weeks (mean 13.4 weeks) lead time in the detection of disease progression compared to conventional follow-up with CT imaging.

Conclusion: Our data indicate that the serial genetic alteration profiling of ctDNA is feasible to predict treatment response in HER2-positive GC patients in a minimally invasive manner. Practically, ctDNA profiles are useful not only for the molecular diagnosis of GC but also for the selection of GC patients with poor prognosis for systemic treatment (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02901301).

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10462813PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3349/ymj.2023.0096DOI Listing

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