Liquid Biopsies Flashcards

1
Q

What is a liquid biopsy?

A

Sampling and analysis of non-solid biological tissue, primarily blood (also can include cerebrospinal fluid). It is a minimally invasive technology for detection of molecular biomarkers. Representative of the tissue/s from which it has spread.

Amniotic fluid analysis is an example of an established liquid biopsy…

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2
Q

What 2 types of information can we process from a liquid biopsy? Which one are we more interested in from a liquid biopsy?

A

We can process both germline and somatic information from a liquid biopsy (but mostly interested in somatic because germline info is more accessible)

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3
Q

How do you collect a liquid biopsy?

A

Collect like 10ml of blood , need to collect in the tube (ie purple?) that has anti coagulants so blood doesn’t clot
also need the tube being filled with blood to prevent:
genomic DNA release (from white blood cells) (you don’t want white blood cells bursting in the blood sample as that will bring in germline info)

haemolysis

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4
Q

What are the types of tubes that can therefore be used to collect liquid biopsies(blood) and what properties do they have/what are logistics they have?

A

Tube type 1: EDTA, Citrate
Properties of tube type 1: Contain anticoagulant to prevent clotting
Logistics and storage of tube type 1: On-site centrifugation within 6hrs of collection to isolate plasma and avoid white cells apoptosis. If not possible, sample can be stored at 4ºC for a up to a week

Tube type 2:Cell-free DNA tubes (e.g. Paxgene-Qiagen; Streck)
Properties of tube type 2: Contain a stabiliser to prevent release of gDNA from white blood and haemolysis of red blood cells
Logistics and Storage of tube type 2: Samples can be stored for 6-14 days at 6ºC-37ºC

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5
Q

After 15 minutes of centrifuging a blood sample tube at 2000g and temp 4 degrees (to avoid haemolysis), what 3 layers are visible?

A

Top 55% is plasma (containing water, proteins, nutrients, hormones etc)
next 1% is a buffy coat (containing white blood cells, platelets)
Bottom 45% is red blood cells

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6
Q

Name 2 liquid biopsies biomarkers

A
  1. Circulating Tumour cells (CTC)

2. Circulating Tumour DNA (ctDNA)

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7
Q

What are circulating tumour cells?

A
  • Cells that have detached from a tumour and travel through the bloodstream to other parts of the body- single cells or clusters.
  • Marker for tumour growth and negative cancer prognosis and treatment response.
  • Extremely rare: 1-10 per 1ml of blood.
  • Found in a high background of normal cells! - sensitive and specific methods are needed to study them
  • Identified/characterised based on transcripts- PCR done on total RNA extracted from the cells
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8
Q

What is circulating tumour DNA?

A
  • Present in different fluids: plasma, serum, urine and others
  • Low concentration (1-50ng DNA/mL plasma).
  • Amount highly variable for person to person and depending on health status in the same person (increase in cancer, trauma, etc.).
  • Presence of permanent genomic DNA background in plasma
  • Highly fragmented but with specific size range (<500bp)
  • Provides information of current genetic make-up (including irregularities/mutations) with 80-95% specificity and 60-85% sensitivity.

you find ctDNA in the top 55%/top part of the test tube of blood sample after centrifuged- in plasma section

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9
Q

How do you isolate circulating free DNA generally?

A

Transfer supernatant to a clean polypropylene tube and freeze it if needed
Isolate using magnetic bead, cellulose-based or silica-based systems.

we can use :

Next Generation Sequencing (NGS), Digital Droplet PCR (ddPCR), array CGH: to identify Amplifications and deletions, Translocations, Point mutations, Chromosomes abnormalities, epigenetic status (methylation)

Real Time Quantitative Polymerase Chain reaction (qPCR): can identify ctDNA presence quantification

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10
Q

What are advantages/disadvantages of Liquid biopsies (vs solid/traditional biopsies)?

A

Advantages
Lower invasiveness
Higher patient compliance
Higher cost/effectiveness
Allow repeated access and multiple sampling
No special training required for extraction

Disadvantages
Low amount of material
Early diagnosis- detection of early tumour cells is difficult
Data interpretation

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11
Q

Why are liquid biopsies good for use in detection of cancer? Why biopsy generally?
(rather than solid)

A

Cancer is a heterogeneous disease.
Molecular properties within a tumour differ and also between metastatic sites.
- Primary tumour information may not reflect the current disease condition.
- No need to identify the tumour site before taking a biopsy and allow repeating sampling.
- Allow analysis tissues difficult to access

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12
Q

Summarise this lecture

A

Liquid biopsies represent a novel non-invasive and revolutionary alternative to conventional biopsy methods.
CTCs and ctDNA are present in blood in low variable concentration and provide useful information about the individual genetic make-up.
CTCs and ctDNA have potential clinical uses as cancer biomarkers:
1. Screening
2. Diagnosis
3. Treatment
Standardization of techniques along with multicentre studies involving large cohorts of patients and controls are required to validate CTCs and ctDNA as clinical biomarkers.

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