Lung cancer is one of the diseases with the highest global incidence and mortality. Studies have confirmed that liquid biopsy markers such as minimal residual disease (MRD) detection in solid tumors, circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), and T-cell receptor (TCR) have roles in monitoring disease status, prognostic evaluation, recurrence prediction, and guiding treatment decisions in NSCLC patients. Peripheral blood dynamic monitoring indicators have broad application prospects and may completely transform the treatment paradigm for NSCLC patients in the future. However, current limitations exist, including the need to improve the sensitivity of detection methods, the lack of uniform criteria for defining MRD positivity, the undetermined timing and cycle of MRD testing, and insufficient results from large-scale prospective clinical trials. Therefore, the transition of peripheral blood-based dynamic testing to routine clinical practice still requires results from large-scale prospective clinical trials. This study intends to conduct a prospective clinical trial enrolling NSCLC patients with different stages and treatment modalities (immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy, targeted therapy combined with chemotherapy, neoadjuvant therapy, adjuvant therapy). Based on peripheral blood and tumor tissue samples, it will systematically integrate multi-omics approaches including ctDNA testing, whole exome sequencing (WES), genome-wide methylation sequencing (GM-seq), and TCR-seq to carry out comprehensive, precise, and dynamic biomarker detection for efficacy monitoring and recurrence prediction, providing new methods and evidence for the clinical application of dynamic liquid biopsy monitoring in lung cancer.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
40
National Cancer Center/National Clinical Research Center for Cancer/Cancer Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
RECRUITINGLiquid Biopsy Biomarkers
Liquid biopsy biomarkers for efficacy monitoring, prognostic evaluation, and recurrence prediction
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of monitoring at 3 years or the occurrence of disease progression.
Comparison of MRD and Conventional Imaging
Compare the efficacy of minimal residual disease (MRD) and conventional imaging in monitoring disease status, prognostic evaluation, and recurrence prediction.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of monitoring at 3 years or the occurrence of disease progression.
The appropriate timing for minimal residual disease (MRD) testing
To explore the appropriate timing for minimal residual disease (MRD) testing during the diagnosis and treatment process of NSCLC patients.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of monitoring at 3 years or the occurrence of disease progression.
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