Tumor molecular profiling is essential for therapeutic management of advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, a biopsy is not for every patient possible and can have complications, which plasma derived circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis could overcome. We assessed the clinical utility of ctDNA next-generation sequencing (ctDNA-NGS) in 72 NSCLC patients, including 59 who underwent both standard of care (SoC) tissue- or cytology-based genotyping and ctDNA-NGS and 13 who underwent only ctDNA-NGS. Hypothetical shifts in diagnostic yield of a ctDNA-first strategy were modelled using real-world NSCLC molecular testing data from The Netherlands. Concordance between SoC and ctDNA-NGS was 71.2%. In fifteen patients (25.4%) results were discordant, but without direct therapeutic impact. In two patients (3.4%), ctDNA-NGS missed an actionable driver, which would directly impact therapy. Hypothetical shifts in diagnostic yield of a ctDNA-first strategy were determined. This predicted a 7.0% decrease in diagnostic yield for (non-) actionable drivers if all patients underwent ctDNA-NGS, including those currently tested in SoC and those not. Offering ctDNA-NGS only to patients not tested in SoC would increase the diagnostic yield by 6.7%. In conclusion, ctDNA-NGS shows promise for predictive diagnostics in advanced NSCLC, offering added value alongside SoC, but comes with assay-specific and biological challenges.
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Tessa J. J. de Bitter
Maartje J. Geerlings
Leonie I. Kroeze
Scientific Reports
Radboud University Nijmegen
Radboud University Medical Center
Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences
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Bitter et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68af4953ad7bf08b1ead4fae — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-13667-z