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Poster session 11

726P - Circulating cell-free DNA-based biomarkers as a new tool for prognosis and surveillance of adrenocortical carcinoma

Date

21 Oct 2023

Session

Poster session 11

Topics

Clinical Research;  Genetic and Genomic Testing;  Rare Cancers

Tumour Site

Adrenal Carcinoma

Presenters

Cristina Ronchi

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2023) 34 (suppl_2): S498-S502. 10.1016/S0923-7534(23)01261-9

Authors

J. Lippert1, G. Smith2, B. Altieri3, Y.S. Elhassan4, L. Landwehr3, A. Prete4, S. Appenzeller5, V. Chortis6, S. Kircher7, M. Asia6, W. Arlt8, M. Fassnacht9

Author affiliations

  • 1 Institute Of Human Genetics, University of Würzburg, 97070 - Würzburg/DE
  • 2 Clinical Trial Unit, The University of Birmingham - Medical School, B15 2TT - Birmingham/GB
  • 3 Dpt Endocrinology And Diabetes, UKW - University Hospital Würzburg, 97080 - Würzburg/DE
  • 4 Institute Of Metabolism And System Research, The University of Birmingham - Medical School, B152TT - Birmingham/GB
  • 5 Comprehensive Cancer Centre Mainfranken, University of Würzburg, 97070 - Würzburg/DE
  • 6 Endocrine Department, Queen Elizabeth Hospital - University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, B15 2TH - Birmingham/GB
  • 7 Institute For Pathology, University of Würzburg, 97070 - Würzburg/DE
  • 8 Mrc Lms, MRC London Institute of Medical Science, W120NN - London/GB
  • 9 Department Of Internal Medicine I - Division Of Endocrinology, University Hospital Würzburg, 97080 - Würzburg/DE

Resources

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Abstract 726P

Background

Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare aggressive endocrine cancer with heterogeneous behaviour. Disease surveillance relies on frequent imaging, which comes with significant radiation exposure. We investigated the role of circulating cell-free DNA (ccfDNA)-related biomarkers (BM) for prognostication and monitoring of ACC.

Methods

We studied 33 patients with primary ACC and 23 healthy subjects (HS) as controls. ccfDNA was extracted by commercial kits from pre-surgical and serial EDTA plasma samples and quantified by fluorimeter (BM1). All ccfDNA samples passed the quality check showing a desired fragment length of 150-200 bp. Primary tumour DNA was isolated from paraffin-embedded tissue for 25/33 patients. Next-generation sequencing was performed using a customised panel of 30 ACC-specific genes (Cell3TM Target Nonacus). Leucocyte DNA was sequenced to discriminate germline from somatic variants (BM2). BM1 and BM2 were merged into a combined ccfDNA-BM score to be correlated with clinical outcome.

Results

ccfDNA concentrations were higher in ACC than HS (median 0.40 vs 0.05 ng/μl, P<0.001) and correlated with tumour stage and ki67 index (R=0.48 and 0.55, respectively). 94% of ACC were positive for BM1 (cut off 0.146 ng/μl, median HS+2SD) and 45.5% for BM2 (at least one somatic mutation in ccfDNA, variant allele frequency 1.0-30.5%). Mutational status at ccfDNA matched with tumour DNA in 60% of cases (additional variants in 16% and missed variants in 12%). ccfDNA-BM score (0-1=negative, 2-3=positive) was strongly associated with progression-free and overall survival (P=0.0004, HR=8.68, 95%CI=2.88-26.5, and P=0.003, HR=3.35, 95%CI=1.34-8.37, respectively). Among 13 patients followed up for at least 3 months (range 1-6), 10 tumour-free at last imaging and 1/3 with early relapse had negative ccfDNA-BM score (100% vs 33%). In two recurrent cases, somatic mutations in ACC-specific genes remained detectable during monitoring.

Conclusions

ccfDNA-related BMs are frequently detected in patients with ACC, representing a promising non-invasive tool to predict early disease recurrence and complement imaging for monitoring. Our findings will be validated in a larger cohort of ACCs with long-term follow up.

Clinical trial identification

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

The authors.

Funding

Deutsche Krebshilfe Stifftung (Project Grant 70113526), patient association AMEND (Research Fund).

Disclosure

C.L. Ronchi: Financial Interests, Personal, Research Grant: HRA Pharma. A. Prete: Financial Interests, Personal, Research Grant: NIHR. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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