Liquid biopsy in oncology and tumor evolution

Published on February 29, 2024   43 min

A selection of talks on Genetics & Epigenetics

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0:00
Hello everyone and welcome to this talk on liquid biopsy in oncology and tumor evolution. I'm Giulia Siravegna and I'm an employee of Haystack Oncology, now part of Quest Diagnostics.
0:14
The existence of circulating free DNA has been known since 1948, and later it was found that its concentration was higher in cancer patients. Many groups then started detecting tumor-associated alteration in this DNA, as well as mutation and amplification associated with resistance to targeted agents until being able to sequence the entire exome directly from plasma DNA.
0:38
Although, when talking about liquid biopsy, we refer to both circulating tumor cells and circulating cell-free DNA, and to the analysis of other sources of circulating nucleic acids such as microRNA, and RNA in circulating vesicles such as exosomes. This talk will be focused only on circulating free DNA. Circulating DNA is released in the bloodstream by all cells in the body, and it is very fragmented and of poor quality. It is released by an active process, secretion, from tumor cells in different organs by circulating tumor cells, and by passive processes of necrosis and apoptosis by neoplastic cells. This DNA is very fragmented and diluted by the normal DNA which is released by the healthy cells. Therefore, in order to be able to successfully analyze it, we need very sensitive technologies. In all these nucleic acids, it is possible to assess the presence of point mutations, methylation status, copy number variation, and structural changes. The sensitive technologies that we exploited involved too many approaches. The first is a single or multiple candidate analysis exploiting digital-based PCR, in particular, BEAMing, which I will talk about later, and droplet digital PCR technologies which are able to precisely detect and quantify known molecular alterations, and the second one is based on next-generation sequencing technologies, which are able to interrogate the whole exome or selected panel of genes directly from the circulating DNA. With the detection of point mutation, copy number variation in those gene arrangements and could enable us to discover novo alterations. Of course, not every tumor releases
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