TY - JOUR
T1 - Multi-cancer early detection test sensitivity for cancers with and without current population-level screening options
AU - Shao, Spencer H.
AU - Allen, Brian
AU - Clement, Jessica
AU - Chung, Gina
AU - Gao, Jingjing
AU - Hubbell, Earl
AU - Liu, Minetta C.
AU - Swanton, Charles
AU - Tang, WH Wilson
AU - Yimer, Habte
AU - Tummala, Mohan
N1 - Funding Information:
Medical writing support was provided by Alexis Fedorchak, Sarah Prins, and Grace Wang (GRAIL, LLC, a subsidiary of Illumina, Inc., Menlo Park, CA), editorial and graphics assistance was provided by Erin Spohr from ENGAGE Labs, LLC (Oak Ridge, NJ) and Kristi Whitfield, PhD, from PosterDocs (Oakland, CA), and funded by GRAIL, LLC, a subsidiary of Illumina, Inc. (Menlo Park, CA).
Publisher Copyright:
© Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori 2022.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - There are four solid tumors with common screening options in the average-risk population aged 21 to 75 years (breast, cervical, colorectal, and, based on personalized risk assessment, prostate), but many cancers lack recommended population screening and are often detected at advanced stages when mortality is high. Blood-based multi-cancer early detection tests have the potential to improve cancer mortality through additional population screening. Reported here is a post-hoc analysis from the third Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas substudy to examine multi-cancer early detection test performance in solid tumors with and without population screening recommendations and in hematologic malignancies. Participants with cancer in the third Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas substudy analysis were split into three subgroups: solid screened tumors (breast, cervical, colorectal, prostate), solid unscreened tumors, and hematologic malignancies. In this post hoc analysis, sensitivity is reported for each subgroup across all ages and those aged ⩾50 years overall, by cancer, and by clinical cancer stage. Aggregate sensitivity in the solid screened, solid unscreened, and hematologic malignancy subgroups was 34%, 66%, and 55% across all cancer stages, respectively; restricting to participants aged ⩾50 years showed similar aggregate sensitivity. Aggregate sensitivity was 27%, 53%, and 60% across stages I to III, respectively. Within the solid unscreened subgroup, aggregate sensitivity was >75% in 8/18 cancers (44%) and >50% in 13/18 (72%). This multi-cancer early detection test detected cancer signals at high (>75%) sensitivity for multiple cancers without existing population screening recommendations, suggesting its potential to complement recommended screening programs. Clinical trial identifier: NCT02889978.
AB - There are four solid tumors with common screening options in the average-risk population aged 21 to 75 years (breast, cervical, colorectal, and, based on personalized risk assessment, prostate), but many cancers lack recommended population screening and are often detected at advanced stages when mortality is high. Blood-based multi-cancer early detection tests have the potential to improve cancer mortality through additional population screening. Reported here is a post-hoc analysis from the third Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas substudy to examine multi-cancer early detection test performance in solid tumors with and without population screening recommendations and in hematologic malignancies. Participants with cancer in the third Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas substudy analysis were split into three subgroups: solid screened tumors (breast, cervical, colorectal, prostate), solid unscreened tumors, and hematologic malignancies. In this post hoc analysis, sensitivity is reported for each subgroup across all ages and those aged ⩾50 years overall, by cancer, and by clinical cancer stage. Aggregate sensitivity in the solid screened, solid unscreened, and hematologic malignancy subgroups was 34%, 66%, and 55% across all cancer stages, respectively; restricting to participants aged ⩾50 years showed similar aggregate sensitivity. Aggregate sensitivity was 27%, 53%, and 60% across stages I to III, respectively. Within the solid unscreened subgroup, aggregate sensitivity was >75% in 8/18 cancers (44%) and >50% in 13/18 (72%). This multi-cancer early detection test detected cancer signals at high (>75%) sensitivity for multiple cancers without existing population screening recommendations, suggesting its potential to complement recommended screening programs. Clinical trial identifier: NCT02889978.
KW - cancer screening
KW - early detection
KW - epidemiology and prevention
KW - liquid biopsy
KW - Multi-cancer early detection
KW - precision medicine
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U2 - 10.1177/03008916221133136
DO - 10.1177/03008916221133136
M3 - Article
C2 - 36316952
AN - SCOPUS:85141393202
SN - 0300-8916
JO - Tumori
JF - Tumori
ER -