Personalized ctDNA analysis for detection of residual disease and recurrence in surgically treated HNSCC patients.

Journal: NPJ precision oncology

This study evaluated a tumor-informed circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) assay as a tool for molecular residual disease (MRD) and recurrence detection in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) treated with curative-intent surgery.

Key points:

  • Cohort and sampling:
    • Plasma ctDNA was analyzed in 76 patients; saliva ctDNA in 54 patients.
    • Longitudinal testing included 656 plasma and 128 saliva samples collected before and after surgery.
  • Baseline ctDNA shedding:
    • High preoperative ctDNA shedding correlated with:
      • More advanced pathological stage.
      • Lymph node involvement.
      • Adverse histologic features.
      • Higher PD-1 expression and increased tumor mutational burden.
    • Transcriptomic analysis of high-shedding tumors showed:
      • Increased proliferative signaling.
      • Elevated EGFR/MAPK pathway activity.
      • Upregulation of EGFR-associated genes linked to invasion and metastasis.
  • Postoperative surveillance and recurrence:
    • Detection of plasma ctDNA at least 14 days after surgery identified 91.3% of patients who later recurred.
    • ctDNA often preceded clinical or radiographic relapse, with lead times up to 500 days.
  • Implications:
    • Serial, tumor-informed ctDNA monitoring in plasma (and to a lesser extent saliva) provides sensitive early detection of molecular relapse after surgery in HNSCC.
    • ctDNA shedding reflects underlying aggressive biology and may inform risk stratification.
    • These findings support integrating ctDNA-based MRD assessment into postoperative surveillance and potentially treatment decision-making in HNSCC.

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