1. Use of Treatment-Focused Tumor Sequencing to Screen for Germline Cancer Predisposition.
- Author
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Lau TTY, May CM, Sefid Dashti ZJ, Swanson L, Starks ER, Parker JDK, Moore RA, Tucker T, Bosdet I, Young SS, Santos JL, Compton K, Heidary N, Hoang L, Schrader KA, Sun S, Kwon JS, Tinker AV, and Karsan A
- Subjects
- Alleles, Cohort Studies, DNA Copy Number Variations, Data Accuracy, Female, Genetic Testing methods, Humans, INDEL Mutation, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Prognosis, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Genetic Predisposition to Disease genetics, Germ Cells, Germ-Line Mutation, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Next-generation sequencing assays are capable of identifying cancer patients eligible for targeted therapies and can also detect germline variants associated with increased cancer susceptibility. However, these capabilities have yet to be routinely harmonized in a single assay because of challenges with accurately identifying germline variants from tumor-only data. We have developed the Oncology and Hereditary Cancer Program targeted capture panel, which uses tumor tissue to simultaneously screen for both clinically actionable solid tumor variants and germline variants across 45 genes. Validation using 14 tumor specimens, composed of patient samples and cell lines analyzed in triplicate, demonstrated high coverage with sensitive and specific identification of single-nucleotide variants and small insertions and deletions. Average coverage across all targets remained >2000× in 198 additional patient tumor samples. Analysis of 55 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumor samples for the detection of known germline variants within a subset of cancer-predisposition genes, including one multiexon deletion, yielded a 100% detection rate, demonstrating that germline variants can be reliably detected in tumor samples using a single panel. Combining targetable somatic and actionable germline variants into a single tumor tissue assay represents a streamlined approach that can inform treatment for patients with advanced cancers as well as identify those with potential germline variants who are eligible for confirmatory testing, but would not otherwise have been identified., (Copyright © 2021 Association for Molecular Pathology and American Society for Investigative Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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