Withdrawn 35th Lorne Cancer Conference 2023

Biomarkers of castrate resistance in prostate cancer: androgen receptor amplification and t877a mutation detection by multiplex droplet digital PCR   (#237)

Yafeng Ma 1 2 3 , Francis Young 1 2 , Therese Becker 1 2 3 , Mohammed Nimir 1 2 , Thomas Opperman 1 2 , Wei Chua 3 4 , Bavanthi Balakrishnar 4 , Paul De Souza 3
  1. Ingham institute for applied medical research, Liverpool, NSW, Australia
  2. UNSW, Sydney
  3. Western Sydney University, Sydney
  4. Liverpool hospital, Sydney

Androgen Receptor (AR) alterations (amplification, point mutations, and splice variants) are master players in metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) progression and central therapeutic targets for patient management. Here, we have developed two multiplexed droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) assays to detect AR copy number (CN) and the key point mutation T877A. Overcoming challenges of determining gene amplification from liquid biopsies, these assays cross-validate each other to produce reliable AR amplification and mutation data from plasma cell free DNA (cfDNA) of advanced prostate cancer (PC) patients. Analyzing a mixed PC patient cohort consisting of CRPC and hormone sensitive prostate cancer (HSPC) patients showed that 19% (9/47) patients had AR CN amplification. As expected, only CRPC patients were positive for AR amplification, while interestingly the T877A mutation was identified in two patients still considered HSPC at the time. The ddPCR based analysis of AR alterations in cfDNA is highly economic, feasible, and informative to provide biomarker detection that may help to decide on the best follow-up therapy for CRPC patients.