Comprehensive Validation of Cytology Specimens for Next-Generation Sequencing and Clinical Practice Experience

被引:25
|
作者
Balla, Agnes [1 ]
Hampel, Ken J. [1 ]
Sharma, Mukesh K. [2 ,3 ]
Cottrell, Catherine E. [2 ,3 ]
Sidiropoulos, Nikoletta [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Vermont, Med Ctr, Dept Pathol & Lab Med, Burlington, VT USA
[2] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pathol & Immunol, Genom Serv, St Louis, MO USA
[3] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pathol & Immunol, Pathol Serv, St Louis, MO USA
[4] Univ Vermont, Larner Coll Med, Dept Pathol & Lab Med, Burlington, VT USA
来源
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTICS | 2018年 / 20卷 / 06期
关键词
OF-AMERICAN-PATHOLOGISTS; GROWTH-FACTOR RECEPTOR; LUNG-CANCER PATIENTS; MOLECULAR TESTING GUIDELINE; KINASE INHIBITORS GUIDELINE; NEEDLE-ASPIRATION BIOPSY; INTERNATIONAL-ASSOCIATION; MUTATION STATUS; EGFR; SAMPLES;
D O I
10.1016/j.jmoldx.2018.06.001
中图分类号
R36 [病理学];
学科分类号
100104 ;
摘要
Biopsy specimens are subjected to an expanding portfolio of assays that regularly include mutation profiling via next-generation sequencing (NGS). Specimens derived via fine-needle aspiration, a common biopsy technique, are subjected to a variety of cytopreparatory methods compared with surgical biopsies that are almost uniformly processed as formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. Therefore, the fine-needle aspiration-derived specimens most commonly accepted for molecular analysis are cell blocks (CBs), because they are processed most similarly to surgical biopsy tissue. However, CB preparations are fraught with challenges that risk unsuccessful sequencing and repeat biopsies, with the potential to further increase health care costs and delay clinical care. The diversity of cytopreparations and the resource-intensive clinical validation of NGS pose significant challenges to more consistent use of non-CB (NCB) cytology specimens. As part of clinical validation of a targeted NGS assay, DNA subjected to nine cytopreparatory methods was evaluated for sequencing performance and was shown to be uniformly acceptable for clinical NGS. Of the 379 clinical cases analyzed after validation, the majority (56%) were derived from NCB cytology specimens. This specimen class had the lowest DNA insufficiency rate (1.5%) and showed equivalent sequencing performance to surgical and CB formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. NCB cytology specimens are valuable sources of tumor nucleic acid and are the preferred specimen type for clinical NGS at our institution.
引用
收藏
页码:812 / 821
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Clinical Validation of Targeted Next-Generation Sequencing for Inherited Disorders
    Yohe, Sophia
    Hauge, Adam
    Bunjer, Kari
    Kemmer, Teresa
    Bower, Matthew
    Schomaker, Matthew
    Onsongo, Getiria
    Wilson, Jon
    Erdmann, Jesse
    Zhou, Yi
    Deshpande, Archana
    Spears, Michael D.
    Beckman, Kenneth
    Silverstein, Kevin A. T.
    Thyagarajan, Bharat
    [J]. ARCHIVES OF PATHOLOGY & LABORATORY MEDICINE, 2015, 139 (02) : 204 - 210
  • [32] Integration of Next-Generation Sequencing Into Clinical Practice: Are We There Yet?
    Kohlmann, Alexander
    Grossmann, Vera
    Haferlach, Torsten
    [J]. SEMINARS IN ONCOLOGY, 2012, 39 (01) : 26 - 36
  • [33] Assuring the quality of next-generation sequencing in clinical laboratory practice
    Gargis, Amy S.
    Kalman, Lisa
    Berry, Meredith W.
    Bick, David P.
    Dimmock, David P.
    Hambuch, Tina
    Lu, Fei
    Lyon, Elaine
    Voelkerding, Karl V.
    Zehnbauer, Barbara A.
    Agarwala, Richa
    Bennett, Sarah F.
    Chen, Bin
    Chin, Ephrem L. H.
    Compton, John G.
    Das, Soma
    Farkas, Daniel H.
    Ferber, Matthew J.
    Funke, Birgit H.
    Furtado, Manohar R.
    Ganova-Raeva, Lilia M.
    Geigenmueller, Ute
    Gunselman, Sandra J.
    Hegde, Madhuri R.
    Johnson, Philip L. F.
    Kasarskis, Andrew
    Kulkarni, Shashikant
    Lenk, Thomas
    Liu, C. S. Jonathan
    Manion, Megan
    Manolio, Teri A.
    Mardis, Elaine R.
    Merker, Jason D.
    Rajeevan, Mangalathu S.
    Reese, Martin G.
    Rehm, Heidi L.
    Simen, Birgitte B.
    Yeakley, Joanne M.
    Zook, Justin M.
    Lubin, Ira M.
    [J]. NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2012, 30 (11) : 1033 - 1036
  • [34] Genetics of Pediatric Epilepsy: Next-Generation Sequencing in Clinical Practice
    Blazekovic, Antonela
    Gotovac Jercic, Kristina
    Meglaj, Sarah
    Duranovic, Vlasta
    Prpic, Igor
    Lozic, Bernarda
    Malenica, Masa
    Markovic, Silvana
    Lujic, Lucija
    Gadze, Zeljka Petelin
    Juraski, Romana Gjergja
    Barisic, Nina
    Baric, Ivo
    Borovecki, Fran
    [J]. GENES, 2022, 13 (08)
  • [35] Assuring the quality of next-generation sequencing in clinical laboratory practice
    Amy S Gargis
    Lisa Kalman
    Meredith W Berry
    David P Bick
    David P Dimmock
    Tina Hambuch
    Fei Lu
    Elaine Lyon
    Karl V Voelkerding
    Barbara A Zehnbauer
    Richa Agarwala
    Sarah F Bennett
    Bin Chen
    Ephrem L H Chin
    John G Compton
    Soma Das
    Daniel H Farkas
    Matthew J Ferber
    Birgit H Funke
    Manohar R Furtado
    Lilia M Ganova-Raeva
    Ute Geigenmüller
    Sandra J Gunselman
    Madhuri R Hegde
    Philip L F Johnson
    Andrew Kasarskis
    Shashikant Kulkarni
    Thomas Lenk
    C S Jonathan Liu
    Megan Manion
    Teri A Manolio
    Elaine R Mardis
    Jason D Merker
    Mangalathu S Rajeevan
    Martin G Reese
    Heidi L Rehm
    Birgitte B Simen
    Joanne M Yeakley
    Justin M Zook
    Ira M Lubin
    [J]. Nature Biotechnology, 2012, 30 : 1033 - 1036
  • [36] Next-Generation sequencing transforming clinical practice and precision medicine
    Yadav, Deepali
    Patil-Takbhate, Bhagyashri
    Khandagale, Anil
    Bhawalkar, Jitendra
    Tripathy, Srikanth
    Khopkar-Kale, Priyanka
    [J]. CLINICA CHIMICA ACTA, 2023, 551
  • [37] Diagnostic value of a comprehensive, urothelial carcinoma-specific next-generation sequencing panel in urine cytology and bladder tumor specimens
    Sun, Tong
    Hutchinson, Lloyd
    Tomaszewicz, Keith
    Caporelli, Mandi-Lee
    Meng, Xiuling
    McCauley, Kathleen
    Fischer, Andrew H.
    Cosar, Ediz F.
    Cornejo, Kristine M.
    [J]. CANCER CYTOPATHOLOGY, 2021, 129 (07) : 537 - 547
  • [38] Next-generation sequencing in residual liquid-based cytology specimens for cancer genome analysis
    Yamaguchi, Tomomi
    Akahane, Toshiaki
    Harada, Ohi
    Kato, Yasutaka
    Aimono, Eriko
    Takei, Hidehiro
    Tasaki, Takashi
    Noguchi, Hirotsugu
    Nishihara, Hiroshi
    Kamata, Hajime
    Tanimoto, Akihide
    [J]. DIAGNOSTIC CYTOPATHOLOGY, 2020, 48 (11) : 965 - 971
  • [39] A comprehensive assessment of Next-Generation Sequencing variants validation using a secondary technology
    Zheng, Jianchao
    Zhang, Hongyun
    Banerjee, Santasree
    Li, Yun
    Zhou, Junyu
    Yang, Qian
    Tan, Xuemei
    Han, Peng
    Fu, Qinmei
    Cui, Xiaoli
    Yuan, Yuying
    Zhang, Meiyan
    Shen, Ruiqin
    Song, Haifeng
    Zhang, Xiuqing
    Zhao, Lijian
    Peng, Zhiyu
    Wang, Wei
    Yin, Ye
    [J]. MOLECULAR GENETICS & GENOMIC MEDICINE, 2019, 7 (07):
  • [40] Next-generation sequencing of FFPE solid tumor specimens for clinical use.
    Yelensky, Roman
    Wang, Kai
    Dogan, Snjezana
    Borsu, Laetitia
    Frampton, Garrett
    Lipson, Doron
    Stephens, Philip
    Bastian, Boris
    Klimstra, David
    Ladanyi, Marc
    Cronin, Maureen T.
    Hedvat, Cyrus
    Berger, Michael F.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2012, 30 (15)