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. 2025 Jul 14:1-19.
doi: 10.1080/14737159.2025.2534961. Online ahead of print.

Smaller, cheaper, faster: where next for liquid biopsies?

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Smaller, cheaper, faster: where next for liquid biopsies?

Valerio Gristina et al. Expert Rev Mol Diagn. .

Abstract

Introduction: Liquid biopsy (LB) has shifted the paradigm in cancer diagnosis and management, offering a minimally invasive and dynamic approach to understanding tumor biology. Advanced next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies have significantly improved the accuracy of LB results, enhancing both its analytical and clinical validity. However, tissue biopsy (TB) remains the gold standard for molecular analysis, often negatively impacting the molecular profiling of tumor patients owing to inadequate tissue samples, or lack thereof.

Areas covered: In this scenario, LB has become a dynamic and easily-to-handle, integrative source of nucleic acids, filling the gap in tissue sample availability for molecular profiling. Moreover, cost-effectiveness analyses have also shown that when LB is correctly applied to clinical settings, healthcare spending can be optimized, enabling an increase in quality-adjusted life years at an affordable cost.

Expert opinion: While LB has the potential to reduce the need for invasive TB and expedite treatment decisions, its cost-effectiveness hinges on long-term clinical outcomes and healthcare resource utilization. In this scenario, 'new era platforms' endowed with advanced liquid handling technologies could not only improve its efficiency and reduce costs but also enable higher-throughput experiments with much larger sample sizes.

Keywords: Liquid biopsy; NGS; cost-effectiveness; diagnostic accuracy; solid tumors.

Plain language summary

Physicians usually need tumor tissue to understand how best to treat cancer. However, obtaining these tissue samples can be invasive, risky, or not always possible – especially when the tumor is hard to reach or the patient presents with comorbidities. Liquid biopsy is a newer, less invasive method that uses a simple blood test to find tiny pieces of tumor material, like DNA, in the bloodstream.This review explains how liquid biopsy is helping in different stages of cancer care. It can detect cancer earlier, choose the right treatment, check if the treatment is working, and find signs that the cancer may be coming back. We also discuss new technologies that analyze how tumor DNA is altered or broken up, which can give even more information than traditional tests.The review highlights how liquid biopsy is already being used in many types of cancer, including lung, colon, prostate, breast, ovarian, and bile duct cancers. It also looks at how these tests could become part of regular cancer screening and care in the future.Liquid biopsy is changing how we detect and manage cancer-making care more personalized, less invasive, and easier to monitor over time.

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