High-throughput detection of clinically targetable alterations using next-generation sequencing

被引:12
|
作者
Vendrell, Julie A. [1 ]
Grand, David [2 ]
Rouquette, Isabelle [2 ]
Costes, Valarie [1 ]
Icher, Samira [2 ]
Selves, Janick [2 ]
Larrieux, Marion [1 ]
Barbe, Aurore [2 ]
Brousset, Pierre [2 ,5 ]
Solassol, Jerome [1 ,3 ,4 ,6 ]
机构
[1] CHU Montpellier, Arnaud de Villeneuve Hosp, Dept Pathol, Montpellier, France
[2] CHU Toulouse, Inst Univ Canc Toulouse Oncopole, Dept Pathol, Toulouse, France
[3] IRCM, Montpellier, France
[4] INSERM, Montpellier, France
[5] Lab Excellence Labex TOUCAN, Toulouse, France
[6] Univ Montpellier, Montpellier, France
关键词
NGS cancer panel; molecular diagnosis; targeted therapies; routine practice; NONSMALL CELL LUNG; SOMATIC VARIANTS; CANCER; MUTATION; VALIDATION; ASSAY; KRAS; IMPLEMENTATION; INHIBITION; DIAGNOSIS;
D O I
10.18632/oncotarget.15875
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has revolutionized the therapeutic care of patients by allowing high-throughput and parallel sequencing of large numbers of genes in a single run. However, most of available commercialized cancer panels target a large number of mutations that do not have direct therapeutic implications and that are not fully adapted to low quality formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) samples. Here, we designed an amplicon-based NGS panel assay of 16 currently actionable genes according to the most recent recommendations of the French National Cancer Institute (NCI). We developed a panel of short amplicons (<150 bp) using dual-strand library preparation. The clinical validation of this panel was performed on well-characterized controls and 140 routine diagnostic samples, including highly degraded and cross-linked genomic DNA extracted from FFPE tumor samples. All mutations were detected with elevated inter-laboratory and inter-run reproducibility. Importantly, we could detect clinically actionable alterations in FFPE samples with variant allele frequencies as low as 1%. In addition, the overall molecular diagnosis rate was increased from 40.7% with conventional techniques to 59.2% with our NGS panel, including 41 novel actionable alterations normally not explored by conventional techniques. Taken together, we believe that this new actionable target panel represents a relevant, highly scalable and robust tool that is easy to implement and is fully adapted to daily clinical practice in hospital and academic laboratories.
引用
收藏
页码:40345 / 40358
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] From single-molecule detection to next-generation sequencing: microfluidic droplets for high-throughput nucleic acid analysis
    Yun Ding
    Jaebum Choo
    Andrew J. deMello
    [J]. Microfluidics and Nanofluidics, 2017, 21
  • [42] A Novel Method Using Next-Generation Sequencer to Enable High-Throughput Detection of Mutation Signatures of Chemicals
    Matsumura, Shoji
    [J]. CANCER SCIENCE, 2018, 109 : 573 - 573
  • [43] High-throughput mutational analysis in cell-free DNA by targeted next-generation sequencing
    Tam, Nga Wan Rachel
    Shames, David
    Darbonne, Walter
    [J]. CANCER RESEARCH, 2016, 76
  • [44] Next-Generation High-Throughput Sequencing to Evaluate Bacterial Communities in Freshwater Ecosystem in Hydroelectric Reservoirs
    Rojas, Martha Virginia R.
    Alonso, Diego Peres
    Dropa, Milena
    Razzolini, Maria Tereza P.
    de Carvalho, Dario Pires
    Nabas Ribeiro, Kaio Augusto
    Ribolla, Paulo Eduardo M.
    Sallum, Maria Anice M.
    [J]. MICROORGANISMS, 2022, 10 (07)
  • [45] Targeted High-Throughput Next-Generation Sequencing Assay for Clinical Screening of Gene Fusions in Leukemias
    Agarwal, N.
    Patel, K.
    Duose, D.
    Wang, H.
    Chen, S.
    Lucas, F.
    Ninan, S.
    Ozenci, J.
    Chen, W.
    Floyd, K.
    McAndrew, W., III
    Toruner, G.
    Jain, N.
    Luthra, R.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTICS, 2023, 25 (11): : S163 - S164
  • [46] A high-throughput next-generation sequencing-based method for detecting the mutational fingerprint of carcinogens
    Besaratinia, Ahmad
    Li, Haiqing
    Yoon, Jae-In
    Zheng, Albert
    Gao, Hanlin
    Tommasi, Stella
    [J]. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2012, 40 (15)
  • [47] Performance of the AVENIO ctDNA assays across multiple high-throughput next-generation sequencing platforms
    Choi, Jonathan
    Dannebaum, Richard
    Singh, Ashla
    Foley, Rob
    Dinis, Jorge
    Choi, Cindy
    Min, Bosun
    Li, Jingchuan
    Feng, Liang
    Casey, Fergal
    Jin, Janet
    [J]. CANCER RESEARCH, 2018, 78 (13)
  • [48] Harnessing the power of next-generation sequencing technologies to the purpose of high-throughput pesticide resistance diagnosis
    Delye, Christophe
    Michel, Severine
    Pernin, Fanny
    Gautier, Veronique
    Gislard, Marie
    Poncet, Charles
    Le Corre, Valerie
    [J]. PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2020, 76 (02) : 543 - 552
  • [49] The diversity of putative antimicrobial peptides revealed in wheat by high-throughput next-generation transcriptome sequencing
    Kovtun, A.
    Shelenkov, A.
    Odintsova, T.
    [J]. FEBS OPEN BIO, 2018, 8 : 197 - 198
  • [50] Comprehensive next-generation sequencing to identify targetable genetic alterations in advanced breast cancer patients
    Tan, KienThiam
    Yen, Yen-Jung
    Chen, Chun-Jung
    Jou, Ren-Shiang
    Yang, Yi-Ting
    Liu, Yen-Ting
    Chen, Hua-Chien
    Chen, Shu-Jen
    [J]. ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 2017, 28