Liquid Biopsies Flashcards

1
Q

What is a liquid biopsy?

A

Sampling and analysis of non-solid biological tissue

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2
Q

What does amniotic analysis test for?

A

Paternity
Sex
Chromosomal abnormalities

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3
Q

Why is blood really good as a liquid biopsy?

A

Fragments from apoptotic cells make their way into the blood on their way to being discarded

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4
Q

What can blood liquid biopsies test for?

A
Circulating endothelial cells
Circulating tumour cells
Disseminated tumor cells
Tumor educated platelets
Cell free nucleotides
Metabolites
Extracellular microvesicles
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5
Q

What type of information can you get from a liquid biopsy?

A

Germline (hereditary) and somatic information

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6
Q

How do you extract a liquid biopsy?

A

By taking 10mL blood by vernipuncture (4-5mL plasma)

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7
Q

What do the biopsy tubes need to prevent?

A

Blood clots
Genomic DNA release
Haemolysis

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8
Q

What do the EDTA and citrate tubes contain?

A

Anticoagulant to prevent clotting

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9
Q

What are the properties of cell-free DNA tubes?

A

Contain a stabiliser to prevent release of gDNA from white blood and haemolysis of red blood cells

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10
Q

What are circulating tumour cells?

A

Cells that have detached from a tumour and travelled through the bloodstream to other parts of the body

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11
Q

How often do you find circulating tumour cells?

A

Rarely

1-10 in 1mL of blood

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12
Q

How can you isolate circulating tumour cells?

A

Antibodies of cell surface markers

Size (they’re a little bit bigger than other cells)

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13
Q

What can you use to analyse circulating tumour cells?

A

NGS, FISH, flow cytometry RTqPCR or in vivo/in vitro culture

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14
Q

What does circulating tumour cell analysis give information about?

A

The tumour they’ve detached from

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15
Q

What concentration is circulating tumour DNA present in?

A

1-50ng DNA/mL plasma

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16
Q

What does circulating tumour DNA provide information of?

A

Current genetic makeup

80-95% specificity and 60-85% sensitivity

17
Q

How do you isolate the circulating DNA?

A

Transfer the supernatant to a clean polypropylene tube and freeze it
Then isolate using magnetic beads cellulose or silica based systems

18
Q

What are the advantages of a liquid biopsy?

A

Low invasiveness
Higher patient compliance
Higher cost/effectiveness
Allow repeated access and multiple sampling
No special training needed for extraction

19
Q

What are the disadvantages of liquid biopsy?

A

Low amount of material
Early diagnosis
Data interpretation

20
Q

Why are liquid biopsies good for cancer biomarkers?

A

Molecular properties within a tumour differ so you get a better overview
No need to identify the tumor site before taking a biopsy
Allows for repeat sampling

21
Q

When can liquid biopsies be used in cancer biomarkers?

A

Early disease stages
Check disease response
Determine subsequent therapy

22
Q

What is an example of a currently approved cancer biomarker test?

A

EGFR mutation in lung cancer