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Multi-center real-world comparison of the fully automated Idylla™ microsatellite instability assay with routine molecular methods and immunohistochemistry on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue of colorectal cancer

Authors :
Velasco, A
Tokat, F
Bonde, J
Trim, N
Bauer, E
Meeney, A
de Leng, W
Chong, G
Dalstein, V
Kis, LL
Lorentzen, JA
Tomic, S
Thwaites, K
Putzova, M
Birnbaum, A
Qazi, R
Primmer, V
Dockhorn-Dworniczak, B
Hernandez-Losa, J
Soares, FA
Gertler, AA
Kalman, M
Wong, C
Carraro, DM
Sousa, AC
Reis, RM
Fox, SB
Fassan, M
Brevet, M
Merkelbach-Bruse, S
Colling, R
Soilleux, E
Teo, RYW
D'Haene, N
Nolet, S
Ristimaki, A
Vaisanen, T
Chapusot, C
Soruri, A
Unger, T
Wecgowiec, J
Biscuola, M
Frattini, M
Long, A
Campregher, P
Matias-Guiu, X
Velasco, A
Tokat, F
Bonde, J
Trim, N
Bauer, E
Meeney, A
de Leng, W
Chong, G
Dalstein, V
Kis, LL
Lorentzen, JA
Tomic, S
Thwaites, K
Putzova, M
Birnbaum, A
Qazi, R
Primmer, V
Dockhorn-Dworniczak, B
Hernandez-Losa, J
Soares, FA
Gertler, AA
Kalman, M
Wong, C
Carraro, DM
Sousa, AC
Reis, RM
Fox, SB
Fassan, M
Brevet, M
Merkelbach-Bruse, S
Colling, R
Soilleux, E
Teo, RYW
D'Haene, N
Nolet, S
Ristimaki, A
Vaisanen, T
Chapusot, C
Soruri, A
Unger, T
Wecgowiec, J
Biscuola, M
Frattini, M
Long, A
Campregher, P
Matias-Guiu, X
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Microsatellite instability (MSI) is present in 15-20% of primary colorectal cancers. MSI status is assessed to detect Lynch syndrome, guide adjuvant chemotherapy, determine prognosis, and use as a companion test for checkpoint blockade inhibitors. Traditionally, MSI status is determined by immunohistochemistry or molecular methods. The Idylla™ MSI Assay is a fully automated molecular method (including automated result interpretation), using seven novel MSI biomarkers (ACVR2A, BTBD7, DIDO1, MRE11, RYR3, SEC31A, SULF2) and not requiring matched normal tissue. In this real-world global study, 44 clinical centers performed Idylla™ testing on a total of 1301 archived colorectal cancer formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue sections and compared Idylla™ results against available results from routine diagnostic testing in those sites. MSI mutations detected with the Idylla™ MSI Assay were equally distributed over the seven biomarkers, and 84.48% of the MSI-high samples had ≥ 5 mutated biomarkers, while 98.25% of the microsatellite-stable samples had zero mutated biomarkers. The concordance level between the Idylla™ MSI Assay and immunohistochemistry was 96.39% (988/1025); 17/37 discordant samples were found to be concordant when a third method was used. Compared with routine molecular methods, the concordance level was 98.01% (789/805); third-method analysis found concordance for 8/16 discordant samples. The failure rate of the Idylla™ MSI Assay (0.23%; 3/1301) was lower than that of referenced immunohistochemistry (4.37%; 47/1075) or molecular assays (0.86%; 7/812). In conclusion, lower failure rates and high concordance levels were found between the Idylla™ MSI Assay and routine tests.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315662128
Document Type :
Electronic Resource