Liquid biopsies in precision oncology for older adults with cancer.

Journal: NPJ precision oncology

This review discusses how liquid biopsy can be applied specifically to older adults with cancer, a population with rising incidence and distinct management challenges.

Key points:

  • Rationale in geriatrics: Older patients often have comorbidities, frailty, and higher risk from invasive procedures and repeated tissue biopsies. Liquid biopsy offers a less invasive alternative that may be better tolerated.
  • Clinical roles described:
    • Early detection and screening in high‑risk older populations.
    • Real‑time disease monitoring (treatment response, minimal residual disease, and early relapse).
    • Identification of actionable molecular targets and resistance mechanisms when tissue is unavailable or unsafe to obtain.
  • Feasibility and safety: The article emphasizes that liquid biopsy is generally safe, quick, and logistically easier for older adults, potentially reducing procedure‑related complications and hospital visits.
  • Integration into care: The authors argue that incorporating liquid biopsy into routine geriatric oncology practice could:
    • Support more personalized treatment decisions.
    • Help avoid overtreatment and undertreatment.
    • Improve quality of life by minimizing invasive diagnostics and enabling closer, less burdensome monitoring.

Overall, the review positions liquid biopsy as a promising, patient‑friendly tool to optimize cancer management and outcomes in the aging population, while noting the need for more dedicated geriatric-focused evidence before widespread implementation.

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