4.7 Review

Liquid biopsy at the frontier of detection, prognosis and progression monitoring in colorectal cancer

Journal

MOLECULAR CANCER
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12943-022-01556-2

Keywords

Circulating tumor cells; Circulating tumor DNA; Exosomes; Tumor-educated platelets; Clinical application; Colorectal cancer; Liquid biopsy

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [82072729]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu [BK20211606]
  3. Xuzhou Key RD Program [KC20064]
  4. Wisdom Accumulation and Talent Cultivation Project of the Third Xiangya Hospital of Central South University [YX202102]

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Colorectal cancer is one of the most common cancers worldwide and a leading cause of carcinogenic death. Surgical resection is considered the gold standard for clinical decisions. However, conventional tissue biopsy has limitations and there is a need for new minimally invasive or noninvasive diagnostic strategies. Liquid biopsy, which allows repeated analysis of blood samples, has gained attention as a new diagnostic concept for monitoring tumor recurrence, metastasis, and therapeutic responses.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most common cancers worldwide and a leading cause of carcinogenic death. To date, surgical resection is regarded as the gold standard by the operator for clinical decisions. Because conventional tissue biopsy is invasive and only a small sample can sometimes be obtained, it is unable to represent the heterogeneity of tumor or dynamically monitor tumor progression. Therefore, there is an urgent need to find a new minimally invasive or noninvasive diagnostic strategy to detect CRC at an early stage and monitor CRC recurrence. Over the past years, a new diagnostic concept called liquid biopsy has gained much attention. Liquid biopsy is noninvasive, allowing repeated analysis and real-time monitoring of tumor recurrence, metastasis or therapeutic responses. With the advanced development of new molecular techniques in CRC, circulating tumor cells (CTCs), circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), exosomes, and tumor-educated platelet (TEP) detection have achieved interesting and inspiring results as the most prominent liquid biopsy markers. In this review, we focused on some clinical applications of CTCs, ctDNA, exosomes and TEPs and discuss promising future applications to solve unmet clinical needs in CRC patients.

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