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Comparative RNA-Sequencing Analysis Benefits a Pediatric Patient With Relapsed Cancer

Authors :
Tony Ng
Yaoqing Shen
Janessa Laskin
Jingchun Zhu
Richard D. Moore
Chris Dunham
Sofie R. Salama
Stephen Yip
S. Rod Rassekh
Olena Morozova
Yussanne Ma
Teresa Swatloski
Steven J.M. Jones
David Haussler
Sreeja Leelakumari
Duncan McColl
Andrew J. Mungall
Martin R. Jones
Colleen Jantzen
Yulia Newton
Glenda Hendson
Rebecca J. Deyell
Joshua M. Stuart
Marco A. Marra
Anna F. Lee
Source :
JCO precision oncology, vol 2, iss 2, JCO precision oncology
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2018.

Abstract

Clinical detection of sequence and structural variants in known cancer genes points to viable treatment options for a minority of children with cancer.1 To increase the number of children who benefit from genomic profiling, gene expression information must be considered alongside mutations.2,3 Although high expression has been used to nominate drug targets for pediatric cancers,4,5 its utility has not been evaluated in a systematic way.6 We describe a child with a rare sarcoma that was profiled with whole-genome and RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) techniques. Although the tumor did not harbor DNA mutations targetable by available therapies, incorporation of gene expression information derived from RNA-Seq analysis led to a therapy that produced a significant clinical response. We use this case to describe a framework for inclusion of gene expression into the clinical genomic evaluation of pediatric tumors.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JCO precision oncology, vol 2, iss 2, JCO precision oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9f049229bb4f71d6f352ef5e9f98eb85