The ECLIPSE (Evaluation of the ctDNA LUNAR Test in an Average Patient Screening Episode) study was designed to evaluate the performance of the cfDNA blood-based test (Shield, Guardant Health) to detect asymptomatic and early-stage colorectal cancer in a screening-relevant population (1).
The study assessed the performance characteristics of a cell-free DNA (cfDNA) blood-based test in a population eligible for colorectal cancer screening
- coprimary outcomes were sensitivity for colorectal cancer and specificity for advanced neoplasia (colorectal cancer or advanced precancerous lesions) relative to screening colonoscopy
- secondary outcome was sensitivity to detect advanced precancerous lesions
Study population:
- eligible persons were 45 to 84 years of age at the time of consent, at average risk for colorectal cancer and undergoing routine screening with colonoscopy
- key exclusion criteria were a history of cancer, a known diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease, a hereditary predisposition to colorectal cancer, a history of colorectal cancer in a first-degree relative, and recent receipt of screening for colorectal cancer (colonoscopy within the preceding 9 years, positive faecal immunohistochemical test [FIT] or faecal occult blood test within the preceding 6 months, or completion of the multitarget stool DNA test or methylated Septin9 blood test within the preceding 3 years)
- study sample size was calculated on the basis of a prevalence of colorectal cancer of 0.5 to 0.7%
Study Results:
- clinical validation cohort included 10,258 persons, 7861 of whom met eligibility criteria and were evaluable
- a total of 83.1% of the participants with colorectal cancer detected by colonoscopy had a positive cfDNA test and 16.9% had a negative test, which indicates a sensitivity of the cfDNA test for detection of colorectal cancer of 83.1% (95% confidence interval [CI], 72.2 to 90.3)
- sensitivity for stage I, II, or III colorectal cancer was 87.5% (95% CI, 75.3 to 94.1), and sensitivity for advanced precancerous lesions was 13.2% (95% CI, 11.3 to 15.3)
- a total of 89.6% of the participants without any advanced colorectal neoplasia (colorectal cancer or advanced precancerous lesions) identified on colonoscopy had a negative cfDNA blood-based test, whereas 10.4% had a positive cfDNA blood-based test, which indicates a specificity for any advanced neoplasia of 89.6% (95% CI, 88.8 to 90.3)
- false positive rate of this cfDNA blood-based test was 10.1% (i.e., 10.1% of the patients who did not have any neoplasia on colonoscopy had a positive cfDNA blood-based test)
- specificity for negative colonoscopy (no colorectal cancer, advanced precancerous lesions, or nonadvanced precancerous lesions) was 89.9% (95% CI, 89.0 to 90.7)
Conclusions:
- study authors concluded that, in an average-risk screening population, this cfDNA blood-based test had 83% sensitivity for colorectal cancer, 90% specificity for advanced neoplasia, and 13% sensitivity for advanced precancerous lesions
Additional comments:
- sensitivity of this blood-based test for colorectal cancer was 83.1%, whereas reported sensitivity of other noninvasive screening tests ranges from 67.3% (95% CI, 57.1 to 76.5) with FIT and 68% (95% CI, 53 to 80) with the methylated Septin9 test19 to 93.9% (95% CI, 87.1 to 97.7) with the multitarget stool DNA test
- sensitivity of this blood-based test for advanced precancerous lesions was 13.2% (95% CI, 11.3 to 15.3), whereas reported sensitivity of other noninvasive screening tests ranges from 22% (95% CI, 18 to 24) with the methylated Septin9 test19 and 23.3% (95% CI, 21.5 to 25.2) with FIT15 to 43.4% (95% CI, 41.3 to 45.6) with the multitarget stool DNA test
In comparison to the use of FIT in the English Bowel Screening programme (2):
- a study investigated the sensitivity for diagnosis of colorectal cancer using FIT at a threshold of 120 μg/g
- study stated that the current programme threshold used in England of 120 μg/g was estimated to identify 47.8% of CRC and 25.0% of high-risk adenomas (HRA)
- the lower the FIT threshold the more likely an individual is to have a positive FIT screening result (and the proportion of false positive results increases)
- in the analysis by Li et al:
- for FIT values 80-119 μg/g 1 in 7 individuals with a positive FIT would either have a colorectal cancer or a high risk adenoma
- for FIT values 40-79 μg/g 1 in 10 individuals with a positive FIT would either have a colorectal cancer or a high risk adenoma
- for FIT values 20-39 μg/g 1 in 25 individuals with a positive FIT would either have a colorectal cancer or a high risk adenoma
- for FIT values 10-19 μg/g 1 in 171 individuals with a positive FIT would either have a colorectal cancer or a high risk adenoma
- comparing different FIT levels with different sensitivities for CRC
- if a FIT at a level of 20 μg/g was used then the sensitivity would be 82.2% for colorectal cancer
- if a FIT at a level of 40 μg/g was used then the sensitivity would be 71.1% for colorectal cancer
- if a FIT at a level of 80 μg/g was used then the sensitivity would be 57.8% for colorectal cancer
- if a FIT at a level of 120 μg/g was used then the sensitivity would be 47.8% for colorectal cancer
Reference:
- Chung DC, Gray DM 2nd, Singh H, Issaka RB, Raymond VM, Eagle C, Hu S, Chudova DI, Talasaz A, Greenson JK, Sinicrope FA, Gupta S, Grady WM. A Cell-free DNA Blood-Based Test for Colorectal Cancer Screening. N Engl J Med. 2024 Mar 14;390(11):973-983.
- Li SJ, Sharples LD, Benton SC, Blyuss O, Mathews C, Sasieni P, Duffy SW. Faecal immunochemical testing in bowel cancer screening: Estimating outcomes for different diagnostic policies. J Med Screen. 2021 Sep;28(3):277-285.