PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New technique to measure circulating tumor DNA in metastatic cancer may improve disease progression surveillance and patient outcomes

A novel study published in The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics highlights the importance of monitoring tumor-specific mutations and introduces a dual threshold classifier to interpret circulating tumor DNA levels

New technique to measure circulating tumor DNA in metastatic cancer may improve disease progression surveillance and patient outcomes
2025-02-24
(Press-News.org) Philadelphia, February 24, 2025 – In metastatic cancer surveillance, monitoring the actual concentrations of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) may be critical. Researchers showed that absolute ctDNA concentration thresholds can be defined to rule out or predict impending cancer progression. They introduce a dual threshold model in a novel study in The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics, published by Elsevier, that may improve cancer surveillance, patient stratification, and risk-informed, personalized treatment by providing more accurate and timely assessment of disease progression.

Lead investigator Geert A. Martens, MD, PhD, Department of Laboratory Medicine, AZ Delta General Hospital, Roeselare; and Department of Biomolecular Medicine, Ghent University (Belgium), explains, "Monitoring cancer progression in metastatic breast cancer currently relies primarily on medical imaging, supplemented by poorly specific, inexpensive biomarkers such as CA15-3. Monitoring tumor-specific mutations in circulating DNA, a concept called ‘liquid biopsy’ is far superior. However, clinicians currently do not know how to interpret ctDNA concentrations. We came up with a solution."

The researchers involved in the study conducted long-term (two years), frequent (five weekly) measurements of ctDNA levels in patients with advanced breast cancer and investigated whether the ctDNA level could be used to predict or rule out impending disease progression. They measured ctDNA using a variety of techniques, including targeted deep sequencing and digital PCR, which showed perfect correlation. The choice of technique used would be dictated mostly by the pathology laboratory’s total cost of ownership and logistic aspects such as turnaround times, they say.

Dr. Martens explains, "We confirmed that ctDNA levels are superior to old school biomarkers such as CA15-3, and that frequent ctDNA measurement results in earlier (three months) recognition of tumor progression. But most importantly, we were able to develop a very simple dual threshold classifier that gives a clear result in 90% of blood draws. At ctDNA levels below 10 mutant copies/mL (0.25% VAF) it can reassure patients that progression is unlikely, while levels above 100 copies/mL (2.5% VAF) are associated with at least a 90% chance of progression. We launched this somewhat provocatively as the ‘0/10/100 copy model.’ We do realize that ctDNA concentrations in blood vary with tumor type and stage, but we are confident that our novel statistical approach to the data can and should be generalized."

The investigators recommend that advanced cancer centers replace conventional protein biomarkers like CA15-3 by patient-personalized, mutation-specific digital PCR tests, and start monitoring frequently for advanced cancer surveillance and early cancer minimal residual disease. Such ctDNA monitoring holds great value: more sensitive and specific monitoring, better use of radiology resources, fewer hospital visits, less anxiety and overall, a positive health-economic impact. By looking at the actual ctDNA concentrations using relatively inexpensive PCR tests, doctors can also select the appropriate time for retesting the tumor or the liquid biopsy using Comprehensive Genomic Profiling.

This research was also able to confirm these same thresholds for surveillance of metastatic non–small-cell lung cancer patients.

Dr. Martens concludes, "In terms of practicality, our concept goes beyond the ‘cohort analyses’ of Kaplan-Meier survival curves. We provide the statistical framework so our work can be critically reproduced and applied retrospectively to ANY data set with registered progression outcomes. We hope this work can inspire other scientists to apply our concept. The actual concentrations of ctDNA hold strong diagnostic potential for cancer progression. We should prepare for ctDNA concentration–guided scheduling of care in advanced cancers."

 

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
New technique to measure circulating tumor DNA in metastatic cancer may improve disease progression surveillance and patient outcomes

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

One day of sleep deprivation can alter your immune system and increase inflammation

2025-02-24
New research reveals insight into the impact sleep quality has on a person’s immune system, and how it could be linked to the development of diseases such as obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases. The study, published in The Journal of Immunology, found that even a single night of 24-hour sleep deprivation in young, lean, and healthy individuals altered the profile of immune cells that help regulate the immune system to resemble that of individuals with obesity - a condition known to drive chronic inflammation. This suggests that the immune system is highly sensitive to sleep and may adapt rapidly to changes in sleep pattern. ...

Study shows primary care and telehealth can deliver life-changing diabetes care

2025-02-24
Researchers at The University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and colleagues at Massachusetts General Hospital, have found that people with diabetes can achieve the same positive results using advanced insulin technology when trained by their primary care providers (PCPs) or through telehealth as they would by seeing a specialist in person. The study’s findings, which focused on Type 1 diabetes, are a major step forward in expanding access to cutting-edge care for people with diabetes, especially for those living in rural ...

The brain’s map of space: A new discovery about how our brains represent information

2025-02-24
A new study reveals how the brain’s "place cells" create internal maps to help us navigate. These specialized neurons, found in the hippocampus, were once thought to rely on precisely ordered patterns for spatial coding. However, researchers have found that their activity, which appears disordered in large spaces, actually follows universal mathematical principles. This surprising discovery suggests that randomness, not strict organization, is key to how our brains encode information about our experiences. The findings could reshape our understanding of brain function ...

AI to diagnose invisible brain abnormalities in children with epilepsy

2025-02-24
Scientists have developed an AI-powered tool that detects 64% of brain abnormalities linked to epilepsy that human radiologists miss.  MELD Graph is an AI tool that could drastically change the care for 30,000 patients in the UK and 4 million worldwide with one cause of epilepsy, researchers say. The study, published today in JAMA Neurology by a team at King’s College London and University College London (UCL), shows how the tool significantly improves the detection of focal cortical dysplasia’s (FCDs) which is a leading cause of epilepsy. Researchers say the tool will speed up diagnosis times, get patients the surgical treatment ...

COVID-19 vaccination and odds of post–COVID-19 condition symptoms in children ages 5 to 17

2025-02-24
About The Study: The results of this study suggest that mRNA COVID-19 vaccination may be a protective factor against post–COVID-19 condition in children following SARS-CoV-2 infection. These findings suggest benefits of COVID-19 vaccination beyond those associated with protection against acute COVID-19 and may encourage increased pediatric uptake. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Anna R. Yousaf, MD, email pgy6@cdc.gov. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.59672) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional ...

Sudden cardiac arrest among young competitive athletes before and during the COVID-19 pandemic

2025-02-24
About The Study: This cohort study found no increase in sudden cardiac arrest/sudden cardiac death in young competitive athletes in the U.S. during the COVID-19 pandemic, suggesting that reports asserting otherwise were overestimating the cardiovascular risk of COVID-19 infection, vaccination, and myocarditis. Many athlete cases shown in social media video montages occurred before the pandemic yet claimed COVID-19 infection or vaccination raised the risk of sudden cardiac arrest/sudden cardiac death. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Jonathan A. Drezner, MD, email jdrezner@uw.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this ...

Mortality among US physicians and other health care workers

2025-02-24
About The Study: The results of this cross-sectional study suggest that although physicians and most health care workers experienced lower mortality rates compared with the general population, this benefit did not fully extend to female individuals or racial and ethnic minority groups. Renewed efforts are needed to address health inequities within the health care workforce.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Anupam B. Jena, MD, PhD, email jena@hcp.med.harvard.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link ...

Telemedicine adoption and low-value care use and spending among fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries

2025-02-24
About The Study: In this cohort study, telemedicine adoption was associated with modestly lower use of 7 of 20 examined low-value tests (most point-of-care) and no changes in use of other low-value tests, despite a small rise in total visits that might offer more testing opportunities. Results suggest possible benefits of telemedicine and mitigate concerns about telemedicine contributing to increased spending.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Ishani Ganguli, MD, MPH, email iganguli@bwh.harvard.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link ...

Researchers find telemedicine may help reduce use of unnecessary health tests

2025-02-24
Low-value care—medical tests and procedures that provide little to no benefit to patients—contributes to excess medical spending and both direct and cascading harms to patients. A research team from Mass General Brigham and their collaborators have found that telemedicine may help to reduce the use of low-value tests. The work is published in JAMA Internal Medicine.  “In theory, widespread adoption of telemedicine post-pandemic may influence low-value testing—such as Pap smears and prostate cancer screenings in older adults, and imaging scans for straightforward cases of low back pain,” said lead author Ishani ...

Research provides new detail on the impact of volcanic activity on early marine life

Research provides new detail on the impact of volcanic activity on early marine life
2025-02-24
Analysis of fossilised rocks known as stromatolites from more than two-and-a-half billion years ago has provided new insights into the conditions on Earth before the evolution of oxygen. Led by Northumbria University researcher, Dr Ashley Martin, an international team with expertise in geology, microbiology, and geochemistry, worked in partnership to investigate nitrogen cycling patterns within ancient stromatolites, preserved in southern Zimbabwe. Nitrogen is vital for all life on Earth but must first be converted into useable, bioavailable, forms as it passes through the atmosphere, soil, plants and animals in the nitrogen cycle. The team believe the unusual nitrogen ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

From single cells to complex creatures: New study points to origins of animal multicellularity

Language disparities in continuous glucose monitoring for type 2 diabetes

New hormonal pathway links oxytocin to insulin secretion in the pancreas

Optimal management of erosive esophagitis: An evidence-based and pragmatic approach

For patients with multiple cancers, a colorectal cancer diagnosis could be lifesaving — or life-threatening

Digital inhalers may detect early warning signs of COPD flare-ups

Living near harmful algal blooms reduces life expectancy with ALS

Chemical analysis of polyphenolic content and antioxidant screening of 17 African propolis samples using RP-HPLC and spectroscopy

Mount Sinai and Cancer Research Institute team up to improve patient outcomes in immunotherapy

Suicide risk elevated among young adults with disabilities

Safeguarding Mendelian randomization: editorial urges rethink in methodological rigor

Using AI to find persuasive public health messages and automate real-time campaigns

Gene therapy for glaucoma

Teaching robots to build without blueprints

Negative perception of scientists working on AI

How disrupted daily rhythms can affect adolescent brain development

New use for old drug: study finds potential of heart drug for treating growth disorders

Head-to-head study shows bariatric surgery superior to GLP-1 drugs for weight loss

Psychiatric disorders less likely after weight-loss surgery than treatment with GLP-1s

The higher the body mass index, the higher the risk for complications after bariatric surgery

Black patients have higher rate of minor complications after metabolic and bariatric surgery than white patients

A revolution for R&D with the missing link of machine learning — project envisions human-AI expert teams to solve grand challenges

4 ERC Advanced Grants: 10 million Euro for ISTA

ERC awards €2.5 million to TIGEM scientist for project on programmable genetic circuits

Tree rings reveal increasing rainfall seasonality in the Amazon

Scientists find unexpected deep roots in plants

Researchers unveil the immune cells responsible for systemic sclerosis’s deadliest complications

New blood test holds potential to reduce liver transplant failures

Science clears the way to treating the trickiest bladder cancers

Drug treatment alters performance in a neural microphysiological system of information processing

[Press-News.org] New technique to measure circulating tumor DNA in metastatic cancer may improve disease progression surveillance and patient outcomes
A novel study published in The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics highlights the importance of monitoring tumor-specific mutations and introduces a dual threshold classifier to interpret circulating tumor DNA levels