PURPOSE There is increasing interest in organ preservation for early-stage rectal cancer. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) for detection of molecular residual disease may aid in clinical decision making for these approaches. METHODS The Canadian Cancer Trials Group (CCTG) CO.28 NEO trial was a phase II study of 58 patients with early-stage, clinically node-negative rectal cancers exploring the impact of 3 months of neoadjuvant infusional fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin or capecitabine and oxaliplatin chemotherapy followed by transanal excision surgery (TES) in patients with treatment-responsive tumors. Patients without a clinical response were recommended total mesorectal excision (TME). A total of 52 patients had blood available for retrospective ctDNA analysis with the tumor-informed ctDNA assay FoundationOneTracker. Blood samples were taken prechemotherapy, postchemotherapy but before TES and/or TME, on surveillance (months 12, 24, and 46), and at progression. RESULTS ctDNA was detected in 24.5% of patients before chemotherapy and detection increased with clinical T stage ( P = .022). The ctDNA detection rate decreased to 6.7% of patients postchemotherapy but pre-TES ( P = .024). Two thirds of patients with ctDNA detected after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (66.7%) had been recommended TME based on lack of clinical response or TES pathology. Of patients (n = 3) with a sample taken at the time of progression, 33.3% (n = 1) had detectable ctDNA; however, no surveillance samples had ctDNA detected for any patient who had a clinical recurrence. CONCLUSION Early-stage node-negative rectal cancers shed ctDNA that can be detected in a subset of patients, particularly those with a higher clinical stage. This offers a potential future decision aid to augment endoscopy and MRI, particularly in cases of clinical uncertainty. More data in larger studies with denser surveillance sampling are needed to support ctDNA integration into clinical decision making for organ preservation.
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Jonathan M. Loree
Antonio Caycedo‐Marulanda
Yanmei Huang
JCO oncology advances.
Foundation Medicine (United States)
NOSM University
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Loree et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69362f514fa91c937236d9d8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1200/oa-25-00055
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