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Supersensitive and robust disease monitoring in oropharyngeal cancer patients by circulating tumor HPV-DNA sequencing (ctHPV-DNAseq)

  • A. S. Pierik
  • , J. B. Poell
  • , A. Brink
  • , M. Stigter-van Walsum
  • , F. Jansen
  • , R. de Bree
  • , J. Hardillo
  • , J. A. Langendijk
  • , R. P. Takes
  • , F. Lamers
  • , I. M. Verdonck-de Leeuw
  • , J. J. Hendrickx
  • , S. A. Koppes
  • , F. Rosing
  • , T. Waterboer
  • , C. R. Leemans
  • , R. H. Brakenhoff*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

Background Post-treatment disease monitoring of HPV-positive oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) is challenging. Liquid biopsies could improve disease monitoring, but the variety in methods hampers clinical implementation. In this study, target-enrichment sequencing to detect circulating tumor HPV DNA (ctHPV-DNA) was applied in liquid biopsies of HPV-positive OPSCC patients, and robust statistical readouts determined. Next, it was investigated whether longitudinal plasma monitoring could accurately diagnose residual and recurrent disease. Methods The target-enrichment panel included 29 cancer genes and high-risk HPV genomes. The assay was tested on plasma from 30 non-cancer controls and 33 patients with HPV-positive tumors, 15 of whom had residual or recurrent disease, and 18 who remained disease-free. Samples were analyzed from baseline to 24 months after treatment. Results By determining and applying robust statistical cut-off values, ctHPV-DNA could be detected in plasma of all patients with HPV-positive OPSCC at baseline, and was absent in plasma of all non-cancer controls. In OPSCC patients who remained disease-free, post-treatment plasma samples were negative for ctHPV-DNA. In contrast, ctHPV-DNA was detected in plasma of all OPSCC patients with recurrent disease to a year before clinical diagnosis. Cases suspect for residual disease in the neck, but with a necrotic metastasis without vital tumor after resection, tested correctly negative for ctHPV-DNA in plasma. Conclusions Target-enrichment sequencing of plasma shows 100% accurate detection of ctHPV-DNA at baseline. Longitudinal monitoring enables early recurrence detection and correct diagnosis of non-vital residual disease. The data indicate that liquid biopsy could improve post-treatment follow-up in HPV-positive OPSCC patients.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102744
Number of pages9
JournalTranslational Oncology
Volume67
Early online date31 Mar 2026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2026

Keywords

  • Circulating tumor DNA
  • ctDNA
  • DNA sequencing
  • HNSCC, liquid biopsy
  • HPV-positive
  • Recurrence

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