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A verified genomic reference sample for assessing performance of cancer panels detecting small variants of low allele frequency

Authors :
Margherita Francescatto
Fujun Qiu
Jonathan Foox
Cesare Furlanello
Halil Bisgin
Daniel J. Craig
Chia Jung Chang
Kristina Giorda
Tao Chen
Sayed Mohammad Ebrahim Sahraeian
Yulong Li
Simon Cawley
Ying Yu
Zhihong Zhang
Yun-Ching Chen
Zhiguang Li
Dan Li
Vinay K. Mittal
Raymond Miller
Wendell D. Jones
Jianying Li
Marghoob Mohiyuddin
Zhining Wen
Rebecca Kusko
Gunjan Hariani
Yuanting Zheng
James C. Willey
Chen Suo
Todd Richmond
Wenzhong Xiao
Lee Scott Basehore
David P. Kreil
Dong Wang
Yutao Fu
Nikola Tom
Yifan Zhang
Zhichao Liu
Andreas Scherer
Carlos Pabón-Peña
Kira P. Grist
Meijian Guan
Giuseppe Jurman
Leihong Wu
Chang Xu
Katherine Wilkins
Jiyang Zhang
Anne Bergstrom Lucas
Barbara L. Parsons
Mehdi Pirooznia
Daniel Butler
Paweł P. Łabaj
Scott Happe
Marco Chierici
K. Miclaus
Suzy M. Stiegelmeyer
Daniel Burgess
Nathan Haseley
Kevin Lai
Weida Tong
Quan Zhen Li
Pierre R. Bushel
Donald J. Johann
Angela del Pozo
Yingyi Hao
Binsheng Gong
Guangchun Chen
Christopher E. Mason
Natalia Novoradovskaya
Joshua Xu
Tieliu Shi
Mario Solís López
Wenjun Bao
Leming Shi
J. Jasper
Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland
Source :
Genome Biology, Genome Biology, Vol 22, Iss 1, Pp 1-38 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Oncopanel genomic testing, which identifies important somatic variants, is increasingly common in medical practice and especially in clinical trials. Currently, there is a paucity of reliable genomic reference samples having a suitably large number of pre-identified variants for properly assessing oncopanel assay analytical quality and performance. The FDA-led Sequencing and Quality Control Phase 2 (SEQC2) consortium analyze ten diverse cancer cell lines individually and their pool, termed Sample A, to develop a reference sample with suitably large numbers of coding positions with known (variant) positives and negatives for properly evaluating oncopanel analytical performance. Results In reference Sample A, we identify more than 40,000 variants down to 1% allele frequency with more than 25,000 variants having less than 20% allele frequency with 1653 variants in COSMIC-related genes. This is 5–100× more than existing commercially available samples. We also identify an unprecedented number of negative positions in coding regions, allowing statistical rigor in assessing limit-of-detection, sensitivity, and precision. Over 300 loci are randomly selected and independently verified via droplet digital PCR with 100% concordance. Agilent normal reference Sample B can be admixed with Sample A to create new samples with a similar number of known variants at much lower allele frequency than what exists in Sample A natively, including known variants having allele frequency of 0.02%, a range suitable for assessing liquid biopsy panels. Conclusion These new reference samples and their admixtures provide superior capability for performing oncopanel quality control, analytical accuracy, and validation for small to large oncopanels and liquid biopsy assays.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Biology, Genome Biology, Vol 22, Iss 1, Pp 1-38 (2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d82f7a7065a20cfa1bf5bc4f2c04d890