Clinical Utility of Liquid Biopsy to Identify Genomic Heterogeneity and Secondary Cancer Diagnoses: A Case Report

Liquid biopsy is a valuable tool in advanced and metastatic cancers for detection of genomic alterations in tumors that facilitate personalized targeted therapy approaches. Analyzing circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) using next-generation sequencing (NGS) provides an opportunity to detect tumor genomic changes during therapy and capture inter- and intra-heterogeneity of genomically divergent cancer cell evolution. Herein, we present a patient with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, with progression to soft tissues, bone, and regional lymph nodes, who was treated with abiraterone plus prednisone, with excellent prostate-specific antigen response. At the time of progression, NGS analysis of ctDNA using the FoundationOne®Liquid test revealed aCHEK2 mutation and aBRAF V600E mutation, the latter being exceedingly rare in prostate cancer. At the time of biochemical recurrence, the patient was referred to hematology for evaluation of chronic but stable thrombocytopenia prior to initiating new systemic therapy. Results of a bone marrow biopsy were consistent with hairy-cell leukemia, where theBRAF V600E mutation is considered the disease-defining mutation detectable in nearly all cases at diagnosis. In this case, liquid biopsy served as a noninvasive, highly sensitive approach to help reveal tumor genomic heterogeneity but also identified an unexpected genomic alteration leading to secondary cancer diagnosis and changes to treatment-related decision-making.Case Rep Oncol 2...
Source: Case Reports in Oncology - Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: research