Why cfDNA has caused a revolution in genetic diagnostics

Written November 11, 2021. Revised by Celina Whalley, April 26, 2024

There's been a revolution. It comes in the form of cell free DNA (cfDNA), which is changing patient pathways for the better across the globe. Due to its nature, cfDNA is considered as an excellent biomarker and source of genetic information.

Cell free DNA is thought to originate predominantly from cells that undergo programmed cell death (otherwise known as apoptosis) as part of the natural process of tissue regeneration.1,2 DNA released in this manner is systematically fragmented in small pieces (average length of 166 bp) and can therefore seep through cell and tissue layers eventually ending up in the circulatory system.3,4

Currently in genetic diagnostics, especially in the oncology and prenatal fields, cfDNA originating from tumor cells ,known as circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) and placental tissue (cell free fetal DNA (cffDNA)) is sequenced to find tumor mutations and fetal genetic disorders, respectively.5,6

It's not easy though and recovery and analysis of cfDNA does not come without its challenges.

There are three main problems to overcome:

Problem one: there is not much of it. In fact it ranges from 1.6 to 23.7 ng/ml of plasma and it is avidly degraded by DNAse enzymes present in our bloodstreams with a half-life of approximately 16 minutes.7,8

Problem two: it requires DNA extraction techniques capable of recovering very small fragments of DNA.9

Problem three: it is at risk of being "contaminated" by genomic DNA released from white blood cells which start degrading over time from the point of blood draw.10

This final aspect is particularly problematic when blood samples are collected far away from the centre of testing and need to be shipped nationally, or even internationally, across long distances. Therefore, following the correct pre-analytical procedures for blood collection and processing is necessary to ensure the recovery of high-purity cfDNA and, consequentially, a higher diagnostic testing success rate. 11

Additionally, specifically dedicated blood collection tubes containing a fixing agent capable of "freezing" blood cells and therefore causing a delay in cell degradation have also been developed to minimize the genomic DNA "contamination" issue.9,12

What is best laboratory practice?

Multiple studies have been conducted to investigate the best laboratory procedures for processing blood samples upon arrival at testing centres. These found that plasma deliver better quality cfDNA compared to serum, probably due to the increase in white blood cell degradation during the clotting procedure.13,14

An analysis on quantity and quality of cfDNA extracted from plasma separated from the blood cell portion at different intervals found that "contamination" from white blood cell DNA is visible at 24 hours post blood draw when using standard K2EDTA tubes; while use of blood cell stabilising tubes delays this event up to 72 hours or even up to 14 days. 9,10,12

Other blood storage factors, such as storage conditions at 4°C, or room temperature, different fixing agents within blood cell-stabilizing tubes, freezing/thawing of extracted cfDNA, do not affect cfDNA quantity or quality.9,10,13 However, freezing/thawing of plasma for up to three times was found to cause a slight degradation of larger cfDNA fragments towards smaller fragment sizes, albeit leaving the overall cfDNA quantity unchanged.13

A significant increase in genomic DNA "contamination" from white blood cells was seen when performing a single centrifugation step at low speed to isolate plasma from the blood cell portion. Instead, using a combination of low speed centrifugation, removal of plasma and additional high speed centrifugation yielded the best quality of cfDNA. 9,15

What are the best conditions for cfDNA downstream applications?

References:

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  2. Underhill HR, Kitzman JO, Hellwig S, Welker NC, Daza R, Baker DN, et al. Fragment length of circulating tumor DNA. PLoS genetics. 2016;12(7):e1006162.
  3. Fan HC, Blumenfeld YJ, Chitkara U, Hudgins L, Quake SR. Analysis of the size distributions of fetal and maternal cell-free DNA by paired-end sequencing. Clinical chemistry. 2010 ;56(8):1279-86.
  4. Lo YD, Chan KA, Sun H, Chen EZ, Jiang P, Lun FM, et al. Maternal plasma DNA sequencing reveals the genome-wide genetic and mutational profile of the fetus. Science translational medicine. 2010;2(61):61ra91-.
  5. Diaz Jr LA, Bardelli A. Liquid biopsies: genotyping circulating tumor DNA. Journal of clinical oncology. 2014;32(6):579.
  6. Daley R, Hill M, Chitty LS. Non-invasive prenatal diagnosis: progress and potential. Archives of Disease in Childhood-Fetal and Neonatal Edition. 2014 ;99(5):F426-30.
  7. Breitbach S, Tug S, Helmig S, Zahn D, Kubiak T, Michal M, et al. Direct quantification of cell-free, circulating DNA from unpurified plasma. PloS one. 2014;9(3):e87838.
  8. Lo YD, Zhang J, Leung TN, Lau TK, Chang AM, Hjelm NM. Rapid clearance of fetal DNA from maternal plasma. The American Journal of Human Genetics. 1999;64(1):218-24.
  9. van Ginkel JH, van den Broek DA, van Kuik J, Linders D, de Weger R, Willems SM, et al. Preanalytical blood sample workup for cell‐free DNA analysis using droplet digital PCR for future molecular cancer diagnostics. Cancer medicine. 2017 Oct;(10):2297-307.
  10. Barrett AN, Zimmermann BG, Wang D, Holloway A, Chitty LS. Implementing prenatal diagnosis based on cell-free fetal DNA: accurate identification of factors affecting fetal DNA yield. PloS one. 2011;6(10):e25202.
  11. Chiu RW, Poon LL, Lau TK, Leung TN, Wong EM, Lo YD. Effects of blood-processing protocols on fetal and total DNA quantification in maternal plasma. Clinical chemistry. 2001;47(9):1607-13.
  12. van Dessel LF, Beije N, Helmijr JCA et al. Application of circulating tumor DNA in prospective clinical oncology trials - standardization of preanalytical conditions. Mol Oncol 2017; 11: 295-304.
  13. Chan KA, Yeung SW, Lui WB, Rainer TH, Lo YD. Effects of preanalytical factors on the molecular size of cell-free DNA in blood. Clinical chemistry. 2005;51(4):781-4.
  14. Wong FC, Sun K, Jiang P, Cheng YK, Chan KA, Leung TY, et al. Cell-free DNA in maternal plasma and serum: A comparison of quantity, quality and tissue origin using genomic and epigenomic approaches. Clinical Biochemistry. 2016;49(18):1379-86.
  15. Sherwood JL, Corcoran C, Brown H, Sharpe AD, Musilova M, Kohlmann A. Optimised pre-analytical methods improve KRAS mutation detection in circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) from patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). PloS one. 2016;11(2):e0150197.