2 research outputs found

    Another time and place: The Black and McKim families of County Sligo

    No full text
     "Irish family history is difficult to research, but not impossible. This book describes two families in County SUgo at Ireland's north-west. The Black and MeXim families share a number offeatures. yet differ in many ways too. and provide good examples for learning more about Iri.sh heritage during the past 300 years. In each case, their lives and interactions unfold as the author introduces each set of informative sources and presents the largest compilation offacts and hypotheses about these people. The study provides inspiration to other researchers who struggle to learn how to trace their Irish families before the mneteenth century."--Cover. </p

    Tracking early lung cancer metastatic dissemination in TRACERx using ctDNA

    Full text link
    Circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) can be used to detect and profile residual tumour cells persisting after curative intent therapy1. The study of large patient cohorts incorporating longitudinal plasma sampling and extended follow-up is required to determine the role of ctDNA as a phylogenetic biomarker of relapse in early-stage non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Here we developed ctDNA methods tracking a median of 200 mutations identified in resected NSCLC tissue across 1,069 plasma samples collected from 197 patients enrolled in the TRACERx study2. A lack of preoperative ctDNA detection distinguished biologically indolent lung adenocarcinoma with good clinical outcome. Postoperative plasma analyses were interpreted within the context of standard-of-care radiological surveillance and administration of cytotoxic adjuvant therapy. Landmark analyses of plasma samples collected within 120 days after surgery revealed ctDNA detection in 25% of patients, including 49% of all patients who experienced clinical relapse; 3 to 6 monthly ctDNA surveillance identified impending disease relapse in an additional 20% of landmark-negative patients. We developed a bioinformatic tool (ECLIPSE) for non-invasive tracking of subclonal architecture at low ctDNA levels. ECLIPSE identified patients with polyclonal metastatic dissemination, which was associated with a poor clinical outcome. By measuring subclone cancer cell fractions in preoperative plasma, we found that subclones seeding future metastases were significantly more expanded compared with non-metastatic subclones. Our findings will support (neo)adjuvant trial advances and provide insights into the process of metastatic dissemination using low-ctDNA-level liquid biopsy.</p
    corecore