1. Profiling Cancer Gene Mutations in Clinical Formalin-Fixed, Paraffin-Embedded Colorectal Tumor Specimens Using Targeted Next-Generation Sequencing
- Author
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William F. Forrest, Teiko Sumiyoshi, Shidong Jia, Garret M. Hampton, Rachel Tam, Sachin Sah, Mark R. Lackner, Hartmut Koeppen, Sreedevi Chalasani, Liangjing Chen, Ling Fu, Liangxuan Zhang, Erica B. Schleifman, Qinghua Song, Gary J. Latham, Haider Mashhedi, Rajesh Patel, Rajiv Raja, and Priti S. Hegde
- Subjects
Genetics ,Cancer Research ,Cancer Diagnostics and Molecular Pathology ,Colorectal cancer ,Druggability ,Computational biology ,Ion semiconductor sequencing ,Biology ,Gene mutation ,medicine.disease ,Molecular diagnostics ,DNA sequencing ,Oncology ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,medicine ,Gene - Abstract
Purpose. The success of precision oncology relies on accurate and sensitive molecular profiling. The Ion AmpliSeq Cancer Panel, a targeted enrichment method for next-generation sequencing (NGS) using the Ion Torrent platform, provides a fast, easy, and cost-effective sequencing workflow for detecting genomic “hotspot” regions that are frequently mutated in human cancer genes. Most recently, the U.K. has launched the AmpliSeq sequencing test in its National Health Service. This study aimed to evaluate the clinical application of the AmpliSeq methodology. Methods. We used 10 ng of genomic DNA from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded human colorectal cancer (CRC) tumor specimens to sequence 46 cancer genes using the AmpliSeq platform. In a validation study, we developed an orthogonal NGS-based resequencing approach (SimpliSeq) to assess the AmpliSeq variant calls. Results. Validated mutational analyses revealed that AmpliSeq was effective in profiling gene mutations, and that the method correctly pinpointed “true-positive” gene mutations with variant frequency >5% and demonstrated high-level molecular heterogeneity in CRC. However, AmpliSeq enrichment and NGS also produced several recurrent “false-positive” calls in clinically druggable oncogenes such as PIK3CA. Conclusion. AmpliSeq provided highly sensitive and quantitative mutation detection for most of the genes on its cancer panel using limited DNA quantities from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded samples. For those genes with recurrent “false-positive” variant calls, caution should be used in data interpretation, and orthogonal verification of mutations is recommended for clinical decision making.
- Published
- 2014