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Andrew McKenzie, PhD, discusses the rationale to utilize concurrent tissue- and liquid-based biopsies in lung cancer.
Andrew McKenzie, PhD, director, Personalized Medicine, Sarah Cannon Research Institute, discusses the rationale to utilize concurrent tissue- and liquid-based biopsies in lung cancer.
Tissue- and plasma-based biopsies are different assays that can often yield different molecular results, says McKenzie. Typically, liquid biopsy is utilized in patients with difficult-to-biopsy or bone-only disease. Additionally, plasma-based testing may be a useful longitudinal tool for monitoring molecular markers, McKenzie explains.
Currently, tissue-based testing remains the gold standard with regard to next-generation sequencing, McKenzie says. Moreover, tissue biopsies that can detect RNA fusions and other markers that are difficult to identify by plasma-based testing are useful tools.
Ultimately, tissue and liquid biopsies are not interchangeable and concurrent use of these molecular tests could be helpful in identifying clinically relevant markers, concludes McKenzie.
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