Utility of cerebrospinal fluid circulating tumor cell quantification and next-generation sequencing in patients with suspicion for leptomeningeal disease
Amanda Onoichenco, Rosivel Galvez, Aaliyah Schultz, Joanna K Tabor, Samuel Latzman, Shoaib A Syed, Naveen Menon, Randy S D’Amico, Morana Vojnic

TL;DR
This study shows that measuring cancer cells in spinal fluid can help diagnose a serious brain cancer complication and guide treatment.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that CTC quantification with NGS improves diagnostic accuracy for leptomeningeal disease compared to traditional methods.
Findings
CNSide assay detected CTCs in 7/9 LMD-positive patients with 77.8% sensitivity and 100% specificity.
CTC results influenced chemotherapy choices and radiation therapy decisions in patients.
CSF liquid biopsy combined with NGS may enable earlier detection and better treatment planning.
Abstract
Leptomeningeal disease (LMD) is characterized by the spread of cancer to the leptomeninges and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and is associated with poor survival. Diagnosing LMD is challenging, as traditional methods such as MRI and CSF cell cytology demonstrate variable sensitivity. This study aims to explore the diagnostic potential of CSF circulating tumor cell (CTC) quantification for LMD in conjunction with current standards. This retrospective case series includes 12 patients with suspected LMD who underwent CSF analysis with the CNSide assay for CTC quantification and next-generation sequencing (NGS), alongside MRI and CSF cytology. Relying on a composite definition of LMD-positive, the diagnostic performance of CTC quantification was assessed. Of 12 patients evaluated for LMD with CNSide, 11 were found to have brain metastases (BM). Lung carcinoma was the most common primary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBrain Metastases and Treatment · Lung Cancer Research Studies · Lung Cancer Treatments and Mutations
