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Purpose: Patients with Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) in need of immediate therapy are largely under-represented in clinical trials. The diagnosis-to-treatment interval (DTI) has recently been described as a metric to quantify such patient selection bias, with short DTI being associated with adverse risk factors and inferior outcomes. Here, we characterized the relationships between DTI, circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), conventional risk factors, and clinical outcomes, with the goal of defining objective disease metrics contributing to selection bias.
Patients And Methods: We evaluated pretreatment ctDNA levels in 267 patients with DLBCL treated across multiple centers in Europe and the United States using Cancer Personalized Profiling by Deep Sequencing. Pretreatment ctDNA levels were correlated with DTI, total metabolic tumor volumes (TMTVs), the International Prognostic Index (IPI), and outcome.
Results: Short DTI was associated with advanced-stage disease ( .001) and higher IPI ( .001). We also found an inverse correlation between DTI and TMTV ( 0.37; .001). Similarly, pretreatment ctDNA levels were significantly associated with stage, IPI, and TMTV (all .001), demonstrating that both DTI and ctDNA reflect disease burden. Notably, patients with shorter DTI had higher pretreatment ctDNA levels ( .001). Pretreatment ctDNA levels predicted short DTI independent of the IPI ( .001). Although each risk factor was significantly associated with event-free survival in univariable analysis, ctDNA level was prognostic of event-free survival independent of DTI and IPI in multivariable Cox regression (ctDNA: hazard ratio, 1.5; 95% CI [1.2 to 2.0]; IPI: 1.1 [0.9 to 1.3]; -DTI: 1.1 [1.0 to 1.2]).
Conclusion: Short DTI largely reflects baseline tumor burden, which can be objectively measured using pretreatment ctDNA levels. Pretreatment ctDNA levels therefore have utility for quantifying and guarding against selection biases in prospective DLBCL clinical trials.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/JCO.20.02573 | DOI Listing |
Cancer Treat Res Commun
September 2025
Department of Oncology, Aarhus University Hospital (AUH), Palle Juul-Jensens Blvd. 99, 8200 Aarhus N (DK), Denmark.
Purpose: We investigated whether EML4-ALK fusions and mutations in pre-treatment plasma ctDNA predicted time to treatment discontinuation (TTD) in ALK-positive non-small cell lung cancer (ALK+ NSCLC) patients initiating first-line alectinib and evaluated clinical characteristics influencing TTD.
Materials & Methods: 42 patients from five Danish public oncology departments with previously untreated, metastatic ALK+ NSCLC were included in the study. All patients received alectinib, a second-generation ALK inhibitor, as their first-line treatment.
Nat Med
September 2025
Department of Medical Oncology, Erasmus MC Cancer Institute, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
CDK4/6 inhibitors (CDK4/6i) improve outcome in patients with advanced estrogen receptor-positive, HER2 breast cancer. The phase 3 SONIA trial compared the addition of CDK4/6i to first- versus second-line endocrine therapy for time to disease progression after second-line treatment (progression-free survival after two lines of treatment (PFS2)), as well as for secondary outcomes overall survival, PFS after one line of treatment (PFS1), health-related quality of life (HRQOL), toxicity and cost-effectiveness. No significant difference in PFS2 was observed; however, on an individual patient level this may be different.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor older patients with competing comorbidities, optimizing oncologic therapies is of paramount importance. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) may provide a strategy to identify which patients who may safely de-escalate certain therapies. In this prospective, hybrid-decentralized trial ( NCT05914792 ) that integrated clinical outcomes, patient- and caregiver-reported outcomes, and correlative tissue analysis, the primary objective was to determine if ctDNA levels were associated with tumor progression in older patients who opted to forgo upfront surgery in favor of primary endocrine therapy (pET).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJTO Clin Res Rep
September 2025
Stanford Cancer Institute, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
Immune checkpoint inhibitors provide clinical benefit to a subset of patients with metastatic NSCLC, yet the reliable prediction of long-term outcomes remains challenging. We conducted a prospective phase 2 clinical trial to evaluate circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) as a surrogate biomarker for early clinical response to pembrolizumab monotherapy (NCT02955758). Tumor-informed targeted sequencing of pretreatment and early on-treatment plasma ctDNA in 25 patients with metastatic NSCLC was performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Immunol
August 2025
Health Management Center, The Affiliated Cancer Hospital of Zhengzhou University & Henan Cancer Hospital, Zhengzhou, China.
Background: While circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) assessment after surgery has emerged as a promising biomarker for minimal residual disease detection in solid tumors, its clinical utility for guiding the selection between postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) and chemoradiotherapy (POCRT) in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) remains poorly characterized. We evaluated whether ctDNA-directed stratification could optimize locoregional control in HNSCC patients following neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy.
Methods: In this comparative cohort study, consecutive HNSCC patients treated with neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy were stratified into two management groups: a ctDNA-guided cohort where tumor-informed ctDNA testing determined POCRT administration given only for detectable ctDNA, and a traditional cohort where all patients received PORT, with postoperative chemotherapy decisions made by multidisciplinary team review based on pathologic response status and pretreatment imaging findings.