19- Liquid Biopsies Flashcards

1
Q

what is a liquid biopsy?

A

sampling and analysis of non-solid biological tissue, mainly blood

blood, plasma serum, urine, CSF and saliva can be used

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2
Q

what are the main types of biomarkers that can be detected via liquid biopsy?

A

circulating tumour DNA/ cells
disseminated tumour cells
tumour educated platelets
cell free nucleotides
circulating endothelial cells
exosomes
metabolites

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3
Q

how do cell-free nucleotides serve as a biomarker?

A

they’re released by dying cells - levels can increase during situations like inflammation or tumour

serve as a biomarker for various conditions where there’s a higher rate of dying cells

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4
Q

how do exosomes serve as a biomarker?

A

exosomes are extracellular micro-vesicles = nano-sized vesicles with a lipid bilayer containing proteins, RNA and bioactive lipids; act as cell-to-cell messengers

detection can indicate state of disease progression and intercellular communication

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5
Q

how do circulating endothelial cells serve as a biomarker?

A

useful for the early detection of heart attacks

help identify cells that detach from tumours = cancer detection

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6
Q

how do metabolites serve as a biomarker?

A

metabolites are released by cells, can indicate disease states and changes in cellular activity

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7
Q

examples of tumour derived materials in blood that can serve as biomarkers - their significance?

A

circulating tumour DNA and/or cells - provides information on tumour genetics

disseminated tumour cells - indicates metastasis

tumour educated platelets - platelets influenced by tumour cells with an altered function, provides insight on tumour activity and progression

circulating free DNA - microRNAs can be isolated, different types indicative of metastasis and type of cancer

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8
Q

explain whether liquid biopsies are better for collecting germline or somatic informatio

A

better for collecting SOMATIC information

germline information can be found in any cell, whereas somatic information is different across different regions of the body, and isolating information is harder
- germline mutations associated/ offering predisposition to specific conditions can be detected via WBC analysis = obtain from blood sample

as blood circulates around the body, it can collect tissue-specific events (e.g. apoptosis, localised inflammation, infection) and released biomarkers from specific tissues = e.g. blood sample can detect DNA coming from the lung tumour cells
- isolating somatic information is more important = isolate where the information is coming from (e.g. disseminated lung tumour cells from lung cancer)

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9
Q

describe collecting and analysing a blood sample for specific biomarkers

A

collection:
- 10mL blood collected by venepuncture – sample will contain 4-5mL plasma
- special cell-free DNA extraction tubes used to prevent blood clots, genomic release from WBCs contaminating somatic sample, and haemolysis

analysis:
following 15 mins centrifugation at 2,000 x g speed at 4ºC - three layers will be visible
- plasma layer will contain circulating tumour DNA and exosomes
- buffy coat will contain WBCs, platelets, circulating tumour cells
- haematocrit will contain RBCs

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10
Q

compare EDTA vs cell-free DNA tubes

A

EDTA tubes
- contain anticoagulant to prevent clotting
- store sample at 4 degrees for up toa week
- requires on site centrifugation within 6 hours for 15 mins centrifugation at 2,000 x g speed at 4ºC to prevent haemolysis, isolate plasma and avoid WBC apoptosis
- less convenient storage, transport to processing lab needs to be quick, limited use

cell-free DNA tubes
- tubes contain a stabiliser to prevent WBC genomic DNA release and haemolysis
- can be stored for 2 weeks at 6-37 degrees
- show a good plasma fraction
- convenient storage and transport

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11
Q

what are circulating tumour cells/ CTCs?

A

cells that have detached from a tumour and travel through the bloodstream to other parts of the body as single cells or clusters

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12
Q

describe CTCs/ circulating tumour cells as biomarkers - what are they? what do they indicate? how are they found?

A

CTCs = cells that have detached from a tumour and travel through the bloodstream to other parts of the body as single cells or clusters

presence is a marker for tumour growth, negative cancer prognosis and ineffective treatment response

following 15 mins centrifugation at 2,000 x g speed at 4ºC of blood sample - CTCs found in the buffy coat
- need to be isolated as they’re present in low concentrations at 1-10 cells per 1ml
- present within a high background of cells

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13
Q

how are CTCs isolated?

A

working with either the buffy coat or entire blood sample = CTCs isolated based on biochemical/ physical or biological properties

  • relying on cell surface markers
    = e.g. tumour cells are often CD45-ve and EpCAM +ve
    = don’t share certain cell surface markers with other cells
    = use magnetic extraction for isolation based on cell surface marker differences
  • physical properties = tumour cells are often bigger, have a different electric charge
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14
Q

how can CTCs be further characterised?

A

specific cell surface markers are associated with specific types of cancer
- e.g. PSA for prostate cancer
- can determine cancer origin, it it’s a primary tumour or metastasis

further characterisation through:
- PCR based assays
- targeting specific transcripts
identifying tumour-associated markers
- gene expression profiles

allows us to quantify expression levels of specific genes/ markers associated with tumour cells, confirm the presence of specific tumour-associated transcripts

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15
Q

what can be studied from isolated CTCs?

A

as we’re working with whole cells - transcriptomes, genomes, proteasomes, phenotypes

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16
Q

what techniques can be used to study CTCs?

A

cultured cells in vitro/vivo to study their behaviour

NGS sequencing of CTCs DNA

FISH studies to detect chromosomal abnormalities

RT-qPCR to detect different markers

flow cytometry

17
Q

what is ctDNA/ circulating tumour DNA?

A

ctDNA is DNA coming from tumour cells

18
Q

what is cell-free DNA?

A

cell-free DNA is DNA coming from all the cells in the body

19
Q

describe ctDNA as a biomarker - what is it? what does it indicate? how is it found?

A

ctDNA = DNA coming from tumour cells

presence is highly variable between people, depending on their health status - ctDNA levels are higher:
- after exercise
- during cancer, trauma or inflammation
- from normal cell turnover and apoptosis
presence provides information of current genetic make-up (including irregularities/mutations)

found following 15 mins centrifugation at 2,000 x g speed at 4ºC of blood sample - in the top plasma layer
- cell-free DNA is extracted first = ctDNA extracted from this
- ctDNA is often highly fragmented

20
Q

sensitivity and specificity of ctDNA?

A

80-95% specificity and 60-85% sensitivity

21
Q

how is ctDNA isolated?

A

following centrifugation of blood sample - cell-free DNA is extracted from the top plasma layer

ctDNA extracted from cell-free DNA

isolation of ctDNA using magnetic bead, cellulose-based or silica-based systems = all three methods depend on binding affinities/ interactions between system and DNA

22
Q

different methods for analysis on ctDNA? what can be studied?

A

methods:
= NGS - no need for fragmenting ctDNA beforehand as it’s already so fragmented
= digital droplet PCR
= array CGH
= real-time quantitative/qPCR

studying genetic/ DNA mutations, alterations and epigenetic status - e.g. point mutations, amplifications, methylation
- studies are more limited = we can only look at the epigenome

23
Q

advantages of liquid biopsies over solid/traditional biopsies

A
  • lower invasiveness
  • higher patient compliance
  • higher cost effectiveness
  • allows repeated access and multiple samplings - can monitor disease progression through extracting samples at different disease stages
  • no special training needed for sample extraction
  • important for tissues that are hard to access (e.g. kidneys, lungs) - blood will contain the information from these tissues without difficulty
24
Q

disadvantages of liquid biopsies over solid/traditional biopsies

A

low amount of material = CTCs and ctDNA present in low concs, need sensitive techniques to isolate material

difficult for early diagnosis = low levels of ctDNA and CTCs will be present, harder to detect especially when catching it early offers patient a better prognosis

data interpretation = lots of background noise/info, need to isolate the information we want, hard to distinguish everything separately

25
Q

explain the importance of liquid biopsies for the detection of cancer biomarkers

A

by analysing CTCs and ctDNA found within a blood sample - liquid biopsies are used for:

  • early diagnosis of a disease/ cancer = challenging with low concs of CTCs and ctDNA
  • monitor response to therapies during treatment
  • pick up heterogeneity within a tumour and between metastatic sites = cancer is a heterogenous disease, liquid biopsies pick up information from all cells within a tumour/ metastasis
  • identify differing genetic make-up, mutations and molecular profiles between different tumour cells of a cancer = detect specific causative mutations
  • no need to identify the location of a tumour beforehand = tissue-specific biomarkers isolated form liquid biopsies
  • allows analysis of hard to access tumours - e.g. kidney, lungs
  • can predict metastasis and prognosis of different cancers
26
Q

describe liquid biopsies as a diagnostic tool for detecting EGFR mutations in lung cancer - significance of EGFR mutation? affect on patient care/ treatment?

A

EGFR mutations = epidermal growth factor receptor mutated , contributes to development of non-small lung cancer

blood samples analysed, mutations in EGFR gene identified with non-small lung cancer patients = makes them eligible for a targeted therapy called EGFR mutations in lung cancer

27
Q

describe pan-tumour liquid biopsies as a diagnostic tool for advanced solid cancer

A

detects various types of cancer/ cancer-related biomarkers from a blood sample = e.g. common genetic mutations, chromosomal alterations

used as a diagnostic test for early-stage cancers, monitoring treatment therapies, measuring eligibility for FDA-approved targeted therapies like BARB inhibitors