Optimizing Cell-Free DNA Workflows in Liquid Biopsy
Whitepaper
Published: July 15, 2025

Credit: Cytiva
Cell-free (cf)DNA is a transformative biomarker for non-invasive cancer diagnostics, offering unprecedented opportunities for early detection and treatment monitoring across oncology applications.
However, cfDNA presents significant technical challenges for reliable extraction and analysis, due to its extremely low concentrations in blood and high levels of fragmentation.
This whitepaper explores comprehensive strategies for overcoming workflow limitations while maximizing sensitivity in next-generation sequencing (NGS) applications.
Download this whitepaper to discover:
- The clinical relevance of cfDNA and its role in monitoring disease progression
- Key workflow bottlenecks in isolation, library prep and NGS
- Extraction methods and strategies to reduce genomic contamination
Investigating cell-free
DNA in liquid biopsy
Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is currently trending as a biomarker from liquid biopsy in
several clinical applications, including oncology, organ and transplant medicine,
and non-invasive prenatal testing (NIPT). Due to the small amount of cfDNA found in
circulation, there is a need to use efficient, highly sensitive technologies, such as
next-generation sequencing (NGS), to detect these biomarkers. This white paper
discusses the challenges and opportunities in measuring cfDNA from liquid samples.
cytiva.com
Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is currently trending as a biomarker
for liquid biopsy in several clinical applications, including
oncology, organ and transplant medicine, and non-invasive
prenatal testing (NIPT). cfDNA comprises various forms of
unencapsulated DNA freely circulating the bloodstream,
including circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) and cell-free fetal
DNA (cffDNA). Due to the small amount of cfDNA found in
circulation, there is need to use efficient, highly sensitive
technologies, such as NGS, to detect these biomarkers.
However, the NGS workflow—isolation, library preparation,
and sequencing—can present its own sensitivity challenges
in clinical application. For example, with cfDNA extraction,
the release of genomic DNA from lysed or apoptotic cells
contaminates the limited amount of cfDNA in a sample,
thereby diluting the concentration of the cfDNA used in an
assay. This white paper discusses some of these challenges
and opportunities to measure cfDNA and ctDNA from blood.
Nucleic acids in cancer
Nucleic acid isolation and purification is a fundamental
requirement in biological research. High-quality DNA is
essential for enabling scientists across a plethora of fields to
conduct life science and medical research. Automation and
technological advances in DNA isolation and purification
have lowered the cost and time needed for DNA sequencing
and diagnostics. This is driving extensive changes through
those specialties where the utilization of nucleic acids has
gone far beyond just the storage of genetic information and
protein synthesis.
The ability to identify tumor genotype variations between
patients, called interpatient heterogeneity, has driven
recent therapeutic advances in oncology. The process
can help predict the clinical response and guide both
conventional and novel treatments. It can also inform
clinical trial enrolment. Researchers and clinicians are now
able to identify intratumoral heterogeneity: subpopulations
of cancer cells with distinct genomes in different regions of
tumor. These subpopulations can arise during tumor growth
due to microenvironmental pressures such as nutrient
availability, a reduced oxygen supply (hypoxia), or radio-,
chemo-, or immune-therapy treatment (1).
Sequencing technologies provide the ability to characterize
intratumor heterogeneity at diagnosis, monitor
subpopulation dynamics during treatment, and identify the
emergence of resistant cells during disease progression.
However, interpatient and intratumor heterogeneity can
pose challenges for the design and enrolment of patients
onto clinical trials that use genomic selection criteria. These
criteria can include the presence or absence of a specific
mutation, for example, EGFR amplification (2).
Tissue biopsy
Currently, cancer treatment is based on the accurate tissue
diagnosis of samples collected by either a needle biopsy or
surgical excision. After collection, light microscopy is used
to reveal the sample histopathology. If they are known,
these samples may also be immunostained for important
biomarkers before finally performing further molecular tests.
Once completed, the results of these investigations enable a
cancer diagnosis and the initiation of treatment.
When there are cases where solid tumors recur after treatment
at the primary site, or metastasize to distant sites, it is rare
to take additional tissue biopsies to guide further ongoing
treatment. Rather, the systemic treatment of patients with
relapsed or metastatic disease continues, generally based on
the biomarkers identified in the original tissue biopsy. However,
because of intratumor heterogeneity and selective pressure
throughout tumor treatment, these biomarkers might no
longer represent the current disease, making further therapy
ineffective. This situation has been observed in many cancers
such as melanoma patients with BRAF mutations (3) and adult
high-grade glioma patients with EGFR mutation (4).
Genome-scale technologies provide an unbiased
characterization of clonal heterogeneity within tumors
far beyond a specific genetic locus or a set of loci. Nextgeneration sequencing (NGS) technology has enabled the
systematic detection of single nucleotide mutations as well
as the identification of rare subpopulations only present in a
small fraction of the overall tumor mass.
Tissue biopsy limitations
Tissue biopsy can provide information about the cancer tissue
architecture and permit further molecular and histological
tests. However, this approach has several limitations. Tissue
biopsy is highly invasive and carries a substantial cost, both
in the time needed to collect the sample and the fiscal cost in
obtaining and analyzing the material. The surgical resection of
primary tumors or metastatic lesions provide large volumes of
tissue for assessment, and these samples are routinely formalin
fixed and paraffin embedded (FFPE) to preserve histology. This
can present a challenge for immunostaining as well as making
the extraction of high-quality DNA challenging and expensive.
The characterization of metastatic lesions through a core
needle biopsy can identify clonal evolution. However, sampling
bias is a concern in these biopsies as they only enable the
analysis of a limited region of a tumor. Consequently, this
collection approach does not capture the heterogeneity of
the whole tumor. Furthermore, tissue and needle biopsy are
also inherently weak at detecting subpopulations. These
subpopulations could be rare and are highly unlikely to be
identified by either biopsy approach. Moreover, multiple
biopsies are not feasible for many patients, for example, the
2 CY11442-27Jan21-WP
Tumor cells
CTCs
Red cells
Platelets
cfDNA
ctDNA
Fig 1. Liquid biopsy is changing the face of oncology.
Fig 2. Circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is the degraded DNA fragments
released to the blood plasma.
elderly or those with multiple medical conditions. As a result,
an alternative sampling approach is needed to take advantage
of NGS ability to sequence multiple genes simultaneously and
detect rare variants in a pool of many genes.
Liquid biopsy
Recently, there have been substantial breakthroughs in
biopsy collection and clinical sequencing studies using liquid
biopsy (Fig 1). These are a considerably less invasive sampling
method compared to other tissue collection modalities.
Liquid biopsy can be sampled from a diverse range of fluids
that include blood, urine, cerebrospinal fluid, saliva, stool, and
lavage fluids. Due to their comparatively reduced invasiveness,
liquid biopsy raises the possibility of an alternative approach
for cancer diagnosis and patient care. As sample availability
is substantially higher, liquid biopsy might also enable the
earlier detection of disease progression. These samples might
reveal changes even before clinicians could observe these by
conventional imaging approaches such as X-ray and magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI), or by blood protein marker changes
in the patient (5, 6).
Liquid biopsy offers high specificity and efficiency for
monitoring tumor changes or metastatic disease progression.
They can reveal precise DNA mutations that are directly
associated to specific neoplasms (7, 8). The liquid biopsy
sampling method also enables easy monitoring of the patients
treatment response(s) to both conventional and novel therapies
(9). Due to the appreciably lower fiscal cost and time required
to perform them, the approach supports the screening of atrisk population groups by simple routine blood sampling. This
substantially increases the possibility for the early detection of
many cancers and, as a result, could increase overall patient
survival through timely initiation of treatment and surgery
(10, 11). Similarly, liquid biopsy tests can be repeated as often
as is necessary to monitor a patients’ progress during therapy.
The potential impact of this methodology in oncology is only
just starting to be realized.
The challenges presented by
cell-free DNA
Circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is the degraded DNA
fragments released to the blood plasma (Fig 2), first described
by Mandel and Métais in 1948. There are various forms of cfDNA
freely circulating the bloodstream, including circulating tumor
DNA (ctDNA) and cell-free fetal DNA (cffDNA). Elevated levels of
cfDNA are observed in cancer, especially in advanced stages of
the disease, and the detection and molecular characterization
of this has enabled researchers to gain new insights into the
mechanism of cancer. However, the detection of ctDNA when
surrounded by normal, non-cancerous cells and non-neoplastic
cfDNA presents many challenges.
The approaches to measure this circulating DNA can require
the selective enrichment of circulating tumor cells (CTCs).
This can also entail the removal of other nucleated cells,
while maintaining the viability of the CTCs. Cell-free DNA
refers to all non-encapsulated DNA in the blood stream (or
other liquid biopsy material) and is thought to be released
during apoptosis (programmed cell death), necrosis
(non-programmed cell death), or by active secretion (12).
Circulating tumor DNA is differentiated in that it originates
from a tumor cell instead of a non-neoplastic cell.
A second, critical difference between cell-free DNA from nonneoplastic cells and ctDNA is the size of the DNA fragments.
The enzymatic cleavage of DNA during apoptosis in nonneoplastic cells produces cfDNA fragments which are, on
average 166 base pairs in length. This size is equivalent to
DNA wrapped around a single nucleosome. In contrast, ctDNA
fragments are approximately 90-150 base pairs, distinctly
shorter in comparison to non-neoplastic cfDNA fragments (13).
CY11442-27Jan21-WP 3
Patient sees physician
Plasma
separation
Report sent to medical
staff for evaluation
Physician discusses
results with patient
cfDNA
extraction
cfDNA
tested
Both cfDNA from non-cancerous cells and ctDNA released
from cancer cells can be detected in blood plasma. The
concentration of ctDNA varies among cancer patients and is
influenced by tumor type, tumor location, and disease stage.
Independent of the tumor type, the frequency of ctDNA is
very low (14). Circulating cell-free DNA is rapidly eliminated
from the body, and with a short half-life of approximately
2.5 hours, ctDNA is hypothesized as a real-time biomarker in
cancer research.
Crucially, ctDNA sequencing can reveal genetic information
about the tumor cell(s) of origin. It was possible to selectively
amplify KRAS-mutated alleles in the cfDNA extracted from
pancreatic carcinoma patients by allele-specific polymerase
chain reaction (PCR), then confirm by Sanger sequencing
(15). The presence of amplifiable KRAS-mutated alleles was
an exclusive feature of pancreatic tumor liquid biopsies,
where none was observed with respect to healthy samples in
these studies.
cfDNA technology requirements
and available systems
Relative to the total volume of blood the quantity of cfDNA is
low. Within this, the level of ctDNA is even lower. The cfDNA
is also frequently very fragmented (16). This high level of
fragmentation presents challenges during the DNA isolation
process where the widespread loss of small size DNA
fragments is common. As a result, the workflow, including
cfDNA isolation and amplification, requires highly sensitive
quantitative methods with the minimization of sample loss.
There are technologies in the market able to extract cfDNA
from various liquid biopsy samples. However, there is a
distinct lack of consensus regarding which extraction
method is optimal for the efficient capture of such DNA.
This is a critical component frequently associated with
the disparities reported in the literature, and includes the
reported total concentration of plasma or serum DNA (17),
in addition to the DNA integrity measurement for patient
diagnosis or prognosis. As previously mentioned, while the
ability to detect KRAS-mutated alleles is published, this
has also been shown to vary depending on the chosen DNA
isolation method(s) (18).
The most critical requirement for the evaluation of cfDNA
from a diagnostic perspective is a robust, optimal workflow
(Fig 3). This must incorporate an extraction process that
consistently purifies all cfDNA fragments with the same
efficiency, maximizing yield and minimizing the presence of
PCR inhibitors and genomic DNA contamination. This will
permit the next-generation sequencing (NGS) of the purified
cfDNA and enable an accurate diagnosis.
Historically, silica column-based systems have been the
mainstay for nucleic acid isolation, utilizing the binding affinity
of DNA molecules in specific buffers to columns in collection
tubes. However, an alternate approach, now one of the most
effective for the enrichment of cfDNA, involves magnetic
enrichment with functionalized magnetic beads (19).
Today, the most robust and routine methods employed in
cfDNA purification are based on either magnetic beads or
silica-based membranes. These methods provide high purity
and quality extracted DNA for sensitive applications such as
NGS analysis. The strengths and benefits of these methods
are beginning to be realized. For example, one study has
revealed that the cfDNA variations in EGFR, PIK3CA and
TP53 was associated with improved survival in patients with
metastatic breast and lung cancer (20). In a second study,
the levels of cfDNA were seen to be more closely correlated
with the overall clinical response in breast cancer patients
compared to either CTCs or the serum level of the circulating
antigen biomarker: CA15-3. Both studies highlight the need
for reliable isolation and quantitation processes (21).
Fig 3. An overview of the cell-free DNA process from initial patient referral, through sample testing and reporting, to diagnosis and treatment initiation.
4 CY11442-27Jan21-WP
As with CTCs, one of the greatest technical challenges is
the identification of very small amounts of ctDNA within
the whole cfDNA pool, where it accounts for less than one
percent of the total circulating free DNA in the blood. Even
with exceptional sample processing and collection, standard
sequencing techniques, such as Sanger sequencing or
pyrosequencing, can detect cfDNA only among patients
with heavy tumor burden. Technological advances such
as the introduction of digital PCR and NGS have enabled
the detection of cfDNA derived from tumors in a far more
sensitive and consistent manner. With the falling cost of
conducting NGS, the high-coverage DNA sequencing of
important cancer genes is now becoming accessible to the
clinician using liquid biopsies.
cfDNA extraction and NGS from
liquid biopsies
The process of obtaining, preparing, and sequencing cfDNA
includes several stages where optimization can improve the
overall workflow and minimize bottlenecks.
The demand for ctDNA measurement and detection in
clinical trials has necessitated the development of highthroughput methods for fast, reproducible, and efficient
practices throughout the entire process. These protocols
are becoming widely available and comparisons are now
revealing that these latest approaches, in tandem with
automated systems, can replace the older, more laborious
platforms, especially when high-throughput cfDNA isolation
is required (23).
cfDNA sample preparation and isolation
Irrespective of a manual or an automated approach, the
sample preparation and DNA isolation stages are critical for
the entire cfDNA workflow. To extract cfDNA from a liquid
biopsy blood sample, plasma should ideally be obtained
from a cfDNA blood collection tube. This is to prevent the
blood sample clotting and minimize cell lysis and artefacts.
However, standard blood collection tubes with EDTA,
Heparin or Citrate can be used with increased chances of
genomic DNA contamination from lysed cells.
The immediate processing of blood by centrifugation might
not always be possible in the clinic. A centrifuge might not
be available on-site, or the blood samples might be taken
over time during a clinic, particularly where a screening
service or study is being carried out. This delay greatly
increases the risk of genomic DNA contamination within the
sample. An additional centrifugation step of the plasma prior
to cfDNA isolation can mitigate this risk (24). Contamination
of cfDNA with genomic DNA does not significantly affect the
overall pipeline per se, and this may not be detected during
sample quality control prior to NGS. However, if the amount
of ctDNA is reported as a ratio between ctDNA and cfDNA,
this will be under-estimated and the results inconsistent.
It is vital to minimize genomic DNA contamination. There are
several different approaches to assess this with many based
on DNA capillary electrophoresis methodologies. These
methods enable an estimation of DNA fragment sizes. This is
important because all PCR-based methods, including qPCR,
digital PCR, and NGS are sensitive to DNA fragmentation.
The fragmentation of cfDNA is regulated by nucleosome
positioning and this in turn is cell type-dependent (25).
In addition to genomic DNA contamination, liquid biopsy
can contain many PCR inhibitors, including heparin and
immunoglobulin G (26, 27). The liquid biopsy sample itself
and the extraction strategy applied will determine the purity
of the isolated cfDNA. A balance needs to be struck between
obtaining a high yield of cfDNA and the minimization of
PCR inhibitors. The NGS process will fail if the inhibitor
concentration is high. However, should the isolated cfDNA
sample pass NGS quality control while PCR inhibitors are
present, and the sequencing run carried out, the data
obtained and analyzed could incorporate biases. This will
result in the inaccurate quantitation of ctDNA within the
sample.
These pre-analytical steps, including blood sampling and
cfDNA isolation, have a strong influence on assay sensitivity.
Many studies have compared the cfDNA yield between
various extraction methods, but the quantitation of recovery
is challenging to estimate. Quality control assays throughout
these stages are essential to ensure an optimized liquid
biopsy workflow and reproducible data. Quality control helps
to standardize workflows, providing information about PCR
inhibition, genomic DNA contamination, and the amount
of cfDNA that can be amplified in individual samples. Each
is critical when measuring ctDNA during clinical trials for
patient diagnosis, screening, and treatment monitoring.
Enrichment and clean up during library preparation
Magnetic bead-based purification methods are commonly
used during library prep. These beads are compatible with
both manual and automated cfDNA isolation platforms as
well as being scalable. These properties enable the researcher
or clinician the option to use higher and lower liquid
biopsy sample volumes for cfDNA extraction. Importantly,
magnetic bead-based methods also enable phenol-free
extraction, which notably reduces the possibility of sample
contamination while also maximizing sample quality.
NGS library preparation concludes with a clean-up step of
the PCR-amplified cfDNA samples. This is required because
there is the need to remove unincorporated primers and
dNTPS from the PCR reaction(s) before NGS. These protocols
are optimized for DNA clean-up, recovery, and size selection,
with several commercial kits available and designed with
NGS specifically in mind.
CY11442-27Jan21-WP 5
cfDNA sequencing and analysis
Circulating cell-free DNA is opening an exciting new area
in diagnostics. Some challenges remain, but these are
gradually being addressed with improvements in cfDNA
isolation, library preparation, sequencing and bioinformatics.
Low pass whole genome sequencing is sometimes used for
screening purposes, but due to the nature of the sample, the
sequenced genome has many gaps and depth of coverage is
not sufficient for many applications.
More commonly, targeted approaches are used, looking
at subsets of mutations which are being designed into
diagnostic panels (Fig 4). This is where the real potential
can be realized. Here, the sensitivity of the tests is key to
performance, and being able to reliably detect mutations at
low variant allele frequencies (VAR) ultimately determines
the quality and utility of the assay.
The first requirement is to obtain as much of the cfDNA
as possible from the sample. In most cases, the volume
of sample will be limited, putting more emphasis on the
reliability and performance of the isolation system to recover
as much cfDNA as possible with minimal gDNA interference.
Secondly, to identify variants with low frequencies, they need
to be discoverable above the limits of detection; therefore
process errors must be understood and controlled effectively.
This can be done purely on the computational side, but such
methods have their limitations, so focus has moved more to
the library preparation for solutions. An example of this is the
use of unique molecular identifiers (UMIs) as employed in the
Safe-SeqS system (Illumina), where every single stranded DNA
molecule is individually barcoded prior to final amplification.
As every starting molecule has a unique identifier, we can
trace the DNA copies back to their origin, which allows most
amplification errors to be recognized and removed from
the analysis. With such limited amounts of input DNA being
typical in most liquid biopsy applications, artifacts cannot be
completely eliminated, but incremental improvements are
leading to valuable increases in sensitivity.
Summary and conclusions
The liquid biopsy is a revolutionary approach that is
opening previously unexpected opportunities in oncology.
It empowers the detection and isolation of CTC, cfDNA, and
ctDNA, drawing on the strength of NGS technologies now
available. Many difficulties have been overcome, but there is
still no standardized approach for liquid biopsy processing
and cfDNA analysis. Substantial progress has been made
regarding sample preparation and isolation. However,
continued progress in reducing genomic DNA contamination
and PCR inhibitors is needed to further improve sensitivity.
Library preparation advances have tackled some of the
bottlenecks and hurdles such as cfDNA enrichment and
clean-up after PCR amplification. While there are products
and approaches optimized for DNA extraction, clean-up,
and NGS, there remains a clear need for exclusive cfDNA
extraction kits and reagents that allow standardization of the
workflow process. The current open systems enable a user to
select components from multiple manufacturers and develop
a cost-effective cfDNA protocol for their own purpose.
Looking ahead, larger long-term studies will be required to
overcome the current conceptual and analytical limits of
ct/cfDNA for clinical practice. With an increasing amount
of data derived from liquid biopsy, bioinformatic analysis
together with the inherent complexity of cancer, consistent,
reliable, and reproducible cfDNA and ctDNA methods
are needed. Incorporation of big data management with
artificial intelligence should also be integrated to make sure
the promise of liquid biopsy and cfDNA studies can be met in
the clinic.
Fig 4. Targeted approaches are used, looking at subsets of mutations which
are being designed into diagnostic panels.
6 CY11442-27Jan21-WP
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