Real-world Monitoring of ctDNA Reliably Predicts Cancer Recurrence and Treatment Efficacy in Patients with Resected Stages I-III Colon Cancer
医学
结直肠癌
癌症
癌症复发
肿瘤科
内科学
作者
Stacey A. Cohen,Vasily N. Aushev,George Laliotis,Iktej Singh Jabbal,Arun Nagarajan,Chongkai Wang,Marwan Fakih,Saima Sharif,Fadhel Alyunis,Mohamedtaki Abdulaziz Tejani,Ali Alqahtani,John C. Marshall,Jeremy Chang,Gregory P. Botta,Kevin Manage,Giby V. George,Shruti Sharma,Meenakshi Malhotra,Sreenivasa R Chandana,Shoshana Mehler
出处
期刊:Annals of Surgery [Lippincott Williams & Wilkins] 日期:2025-08-07被引量:3
OBJECTIVE: In this study, we evaluate the utility of ctDNA analysis in a large cohort of patients for whom ctDNA testing was ordered commercially with real-world application. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) has emerged as a prognostic and predictive biomarker for assessing post-surgical molecular residual disease (MRD) and response to treatment. METHODS: A real-world data analysis was performed using commercial ctDNA testing (SignateraTM) from patients (N=795, n=5,971 plasma samples) with stage I-III colon cancer treated at multiple US institutions. The association of ctDNA detection within the MRD window, during surveillance, and the impact of ACT was correlated with patient outcomes. RESULTS: ctDNA-positive patients during the MRD window and surveillance showed significantly shorter DFS compared to ctDNA-negative patients (hazard ratio (HR): 9.85, P<0.0001; HR: 26.91, P<0.0001). Multivariate analysis of the MRD window revealed ctDNA-positivity as the most significant factor associated with inferior DFS (adjHR: 7.7, P<0.001). MRD-positive patients who received ACT showed improved DFS compared to patients observed post-surgery (adjHR: 6.1, FDR adj P=0.0007). No ACT benefit was observed in MRD-negative patients (adj HR: 1.20, FDR adj P=0.768). On evaluating ctDNA dynamics from MRD to surveillance, patients who remained ctDNA-positive or converted from negative to positive showed a significantly inferior DFS (HR: 34.40, P<0.0001; HR: 13.65, P<0.0001) compared to persistently ctDNA-negative patients. CONCLUSIONS: Postsurgical ctDNA detection is prognostic of relapse and potentially predictive of ACT benefit in patients with resectable colon cancer, which may enable personalized surveillance, intervention, and/or trial options, ultimately improving patient outcomes.