Performance Characteristics of a Targeted Sequencing Platform for Simultaneous Detection of Single Nucleotide Variants, Insertions/Deletions, Copy Number Alterations, and Gene Fusions in Cancer Genome.

Journal: Archives Of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
Published:
Abstract

Context.—: An increasing number of molecular laboratories are implementing next-generation sequencing platforms to identify clinically actionable and relevant genomic alterations for precision oncology. Objective.—: To describe the validation studies as per New York State-Department of Health (NYS-DOH) guidelines for the Oncomine Comprehensive Panel v2, which was originally tailored to the National Cancer Institute Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (NCI-MATCH) trial. Design.—: Accuracy, precision, and reproducibility were investigated by using 130 DNA and 18 RNA samples from cytology cell blocks; formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues; and frozen samples. Analytic sensitivity and specificity were tested by using ATCC and HapMap cell lines. Results.—: High accuracy and precision/reproducibility were observed for single nucleotide variants and insertion/deletions. We also share our experience in the detection of gene fusions and copy number alterations from an amplicon-based sequencing platform. After sequencing analysis, variant annotation and report generation were performed by using the institutional knowledgebase. Conclusions.—: This study serves as an example for validating a comprehensive targeted next-generation sequencing assay with both DNASeq and RNASeq components for NYS-DOH.

Authors
Kyung Park, Hung Tran, Kenneth Eng, Sinan Ramazanoglu, Rebecca Marrero Rolon, Theresa Scognamiglio, Alain Borczuk, Juan Mosquera, Qiulu Pan, Andrea Sboner, Mark Rubin, Olivier Elemento, Hanna Rennert, Helen Fernandes, Wei Song