1. Multisite Verification of a Targeted CFTR Polymerase Chain Reaction/Capillary Electrophoresis Assay That Evaluates Pathogenic Variants Across Diverse Ethnic and Ancestral Groups.
- Author
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Hall, Bradley, Milligan, John N., Kelnar, Kevin, Hallmark, Elliot, Ashton, Jacob D., Parker, Connor A., Filipovic-Sadic, Stela, Sharp, Abigail, Eagle, Samantha, Rodgers, Nissa, Leung, Marco, Mathew, Mariam T., Grissom, Luke, Post, Rebecca, Teran, Natasa, and Latham, Gary J.
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CYSTIC fibrosis diagnosis , *GENOMICS , *RESEARCH funding , *POLYMERASE chain reaction , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DNA , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *GENETIC variation , *CELL lines , *CAPILLARY electrophoresis , *RESEARCH , *GENETIC mutation , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CYSTIC fibrosis , *GENETIC testing , *GENOTYPES , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) , *SEQUENCE analysis - Abstract
Context.--Existing targeted cystic fibrosis screening assays miss important pathogenic CFTR variants in the ethnically diverse US population. Objective.--To evaluate the analytic performance of a multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR)/capillary electropho-resis (CE) CFTR assay panel that simultaneously interrogates primary pathogenic variants of different ethnic/ancestral groups. Design.--Performance characteristic assessment and variant coverage comparison of the panel with a focus on ethnicity-specific CFTR variants were performed. Sample DNA was primarily from whole blood or cell lines. Detection of CFTR carriers was compared across several commercially available CFTR kits and recommended variant sets based on panel content. Results.--The panel interrogated 65 pathogenic CFTR variants representing 92% coverage from a recent genomic sequencing survey of the US population, including 4 variants with top 5 frequency in African or Asian populations not reflected in other targeted panels. In simulation studies, the panel represented 95% of carriers across the global population, resulting in a 6.9% to 19.0% higher carrier detection rate compared with 10 targeted panels or variant sets. Precision and sensitivity/specificity were 100% concordant. Multisite sample-level genotyping accuracy was 99.2%. Across PCR and CE instruments, sample-level genotyping accuracy was 97.1 %, with greater than 99% agreement for all variant-level metrics. Conclusions.--The CFTR assay achieves 92% or higher coverage of CFTR variants in diverse populations and provides improved pan-ethnic coverage of minority subgroups of the US populace. The assay can be completed within 5 hours from DNA sample to genotype, and performance data exceed acceptance criteria for analytic metrics. This assay panel content may help address gaps in ancestry-specific CFTR genotypes while providing a streamlined procedure with rapidly generated results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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