New Circulating Tumor DNA Reference Standards

AMSBIO announces the launch of a new range of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) reference standards for cancer disease management research

16 Oct 2018
Frankie MacDonald
Administrator / Office Personnel

AMSBIO now offers ctDNA Reference Standards highly characterized, quantitative multiplex quality controls to support the development of assays. These standards are engineered to mimic the fragmentation profile of nucleosomal ctDNA (~166 bp) observed in patient samples across are range of allele frequencies. Pre-validated by digital PCR, cancer-associated mutations are included across EGFR, PIK3CA, NRAS and KRAS samples.

A critical goal in cancer disease management is early detection. When detected early, cancer progression can be arrested using techniques such as targeted therapy, chemotherapy and surgery thereby increasing the chances of survival and a higher quality of life. Liquid biopsy offers the promise of providing a quick, non-invasive and cost-effective alternative to surgical biopsies, allowing tumor analysis through a simple blood sample. Traces of the ctDNA in the blood offer the potential of not only earlier cancer detection, but may also guide therapy selection, enabling routine monitoring of cancer to assess minimal residual disease, and resistance monitoring during treatment.

Advances in Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) and digital PCR (dPCR) are accelerating the development of quantitative assays that can the detect low amounts of mutant DNA present in blood samples, often down to 1 in 1000 mutant alleles (0.1%) or lower. These developments have enabled non-invasive cancer profiling of associated somatic variants from ctDNA.

Click here to read about how digital PCR can be used to predict and respond to lung cancer mutations before the tumor progresses >

Based on CRISPR/Cas9 isogenic cell lines, AMSBIO Patient-Like circulating ctDNA is available as purified DNA or in a synthetic plasma. These reference standards can be directly incorporated into assay optimization, as an essential control for evaluating of limits of detection and specificity.

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