Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) remains a dire disease being the first cause of cancer death among both genders. Early-stage NSCLC often has better treatment outcomes despite it being a highly heterogeneous disease. So far, the neo-adjuvant chemotherapy strategies have led to a small benefit with an improvement of 5% in overall survival as an absolute benefit. Recently, the introduction of immune checkpoint inhibitors combined with chemotherapy has shown robust efficacy in terms of event-free survival and overall survival. Thus, these combinations are today considered a new standard of care in early-stage NSCLC. The application of these strategies to all-comer population lead to confounding definitive results regarding the efficacy and predictive biomarkers are urgently needed balancing the promise of healing than toxicities. At present, the clinical staging TNM system guides the clinical choice, however it is not entirely sufficient. Circulant tumoral DNA (ctDNA) emerged as a promising prognostic and predictive biomarker that may guide the future perioperative strategy and pave the way to personalized medicine also in this exciting field. This narrative review aims to put in the context the employment of ctDNA, give some perspective and suggestions weighing the pros and cons of this technique for our tomorrow clinical practice.
Passarella, G., Canova, S., Abbate, M., Caspani, G., Sala, L., Russo, A., et al. (2025). The hype around ctDNA guiding an informed perioperative therapeutic strategy in early-stage non-small cell lung cancer. DISCOVER ONCOLOGY, 16(1) [10.1007/s12672-025-01826-7].
The hype around ctDNA guiding an informed perioperative therapeutic strategy in early-stage non-small cell lung cancer
Caspani, Giulia;Cortinovis, Diego Luigi
2025
Abstract
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) remains a dire disease being the first cause of cancer death among both genders. Early-stage NSCLC often has better treatment outcomes despite it being a highly heterogeneous disease. So far, the neo-adjuvant chemotherapy strategies have led to a small benefit with an improvement of 5% in overall survival as an absolute benefit. Recently, the introduction of immune checkpoint inhibitors combined with chemotherapy has shown robust efficacy in terms of event-free survival and overall survival. Thus, these combinations are today considered a new standard of care in early-stage NSCLC. The application of these strategies to all-comer population lead to confounding definitive results regarding the efficacy and predictive biomarkers are urgently needed balancing the promise of healing than toxicities. At present, the clinical staging TNM system guides the clinical choice, however it is not entirely sufficient. Circulant tumoral DNA (ctDNA) emerged as a promising prognostic and predictive biomarker that may guide the future perioperative strategy and pave the way to personalized medicine also in this exciting field. This narrative review aims to put in the context the employment of ctDNA, give some perspective and suggestions weighing the pros and cons of this technique for our tomorrow clinical practice.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.