Back to Search Start Over

Fine‐needle aspiration as an alternative to core needle biopsy for tumour molecular profiling in precision oncology: prospective comparative study of next‐generation sequencing in cancer patients included in the SHIVA02 trial

Authors :
Célia Dupain
Julien Masliah‐Planchon
Céline Gu
Elodie Girard
Pierre Gestraud
Pauline Du Rusquec
Edith Borcoman
Diana Bello
Francesco Ricci
Ségolène Hescot
Marie‐Paule Sablin
Patricia Tresca
Alexandre deMoura
Delphine Loirat
Maxime Frelaut
Anne Vincent‐Salomon
Charlotte Lecerf
Céline Callens
Samantha Antonio
Coralie Franck
Odette Mariani
Ivan Bièche
Maud Kamal
Christophe Le Tourneau
Vincent Servois
Source :
Molecular Oncology, Vol 15, Iss 1, Pp 104-115 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

High‐throughput molecular profiling of solid tumours using core needle biopsies (CNB) allows the identification of actionable molecular alterations, with around 70% success rate. Although several studies have demonstrated the utility of small biopsy specimens for molecular testing, there remains debate as to the sensitivity of the less invasive fine‐needle aspiration (FNA) compared to CNB to detect molecular alterations. We aimed to prospectively evaluate the potential of FNA to detect such alterations in various tumour types as compared to CNB in cancer patients included in the SHIVA02 trial. An in‐house amplicon‐based targeted sequencing panel (Illumina TSCA 99.3 kb panel covering 87 genes) was used to identify pathogenic variants and gene copy number variations (CNV) in concomitant CNB and FNA samples obtained from 61 patients enrolled in the SHIVA02 trial (NCT03084757). The main tumour types analysed were breast (38%), colon (15%), pancreas (11%), followed by cervix and stomach (7% each). We report 123 molecular alterations (85 variants, 23 amplifications and 15 homozygous deletions) among which 98 (80%) were concordant between CNB and FNA. The remaining discordances were mainly related to deletions status, yet undetected alterations were not exclusively specific to FNA. Comparative analysis of molecular alterations in CNB and FNA showed high concordance in terms of variants as well as CNVs identified. We conclude FNA could therefore be used in routine diagnostics workflow and clinical trials for tumour molecular profiling with the advantages of being minimally invasive and preserve tissue material needed for diagnostic, prognostic or theranostic purposes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18780261 and 15747891
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.fd5e3a2e632f4a30ae0bd88e27294874
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.12776