Literature DB >> 18719197

Intraplatform reproducibility and technical precision of gene expression profiling in 4 laboratories investigating 160 leukemia samples: the DACH study.

Alexander Kohlmann1, Elisabeth Haschke-Becher, Barbara Wimmer, Ariana Huber-Wechselberger, Sandrine Meyer-Monard, Heike Huxol, Uwe Siegler, Michel Rossier, Thomas Matthes, Michela Rebsamen, Alberto Chiappe, Adeline Diemand, Sonja Rauhut, Andrea Johnson, Wei-Min Liu, P Mickey Williams, Lothar Wieczorek, Torsten Haferlach.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Gene expression profiling has the potential to offer consistent, objective diagnostic test results once a standardized protocol has been established. We investigated the robustness, precision, and reproducibility of microarray technology.
METHODS: One hundred sixty individual patient samples representing 11 subtypes of acute and chronic leukemias, myelodysplastic syndromes, and nonleukemia as a control group were centrally collected and diagnosed as part of the daily routine in the Munich Leukemia Laboratory. The custom AmpliChip Leukemia research microarray was used for technical analyses of quadruplicate mononuclear cell lysates in 4 different laboratories in Germany (D), Austria (A), and Switzerland (CH) (the DACH study).
RESULTS: Total-RNA preparations were successfully performed in 637 (99.5%) of 640 cases. Mean differences between pairs of laboratories in the total-RNA yield from the same sample ranged from 0.02 mug to 1.03 mug. Further processing produced 622 successful in vitro transcription reactions (97.6%); the mean differences between laboratories in the cRNA yield from the same sample ranged from 0.40 mug to 6.18 mug. After hybridization to microarrays, a mean of 47.6%, 46.5%, 46.2%, and 46.4% of probe sets were detected as present for the 4 laboratories, with mean signal-intensity scaling factors of 3.1, 3.7, 4.0, and 4.2, respectively. In unsupervised hierarchical cluster and principal component analyses, replicates from the same patient always clustered closely together, with no indications of any association between gene expression profiles due to different operators or laboratories.
CONCLUSIONS: Microarray analysis can be performed with high interlaboratory reproducibility and with comparable quality and high technical precision across laboratories.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18719197     DOI: 10.1373/clinchem.2008.108506

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Chem        ISSN: 0009-9147            Impact factor:   8.327


  7 in total

Review 1.  Diagnostic microarrays in hematologic oncology: applications of high- and low-density arrays.

Authors:  Tatyana V Nasedkina; Natalia A Guseva; Olga A Gra; Olga N Mityaeva; Alexander V Chudinov; Alexander S Zasedatelev
Journal:  Mol Diagn Ther       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 4.074

2.  RNA-stabilized whole blood samples but not peripheral blood mononuclear cells can be stored for prolonged time periods prior to transcriptome analysis.

Authors:  Svenja Debey-Pascher; Andrea Hofmann; Fatima Kreusch; Gerold Schuler; Beatrice Schuler-Thurner; Joachim L Schultze; Andrea Staratschek-Jox
Journal:  J Mol Diagn       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 5.568

3.  CDKN1B, encoding the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1B (p27), is located in the minimally deleted region of 12p abnormalities in myeloid malignancies and its low expression is a favorable prognostic marker in acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors:  Claudia Haferlach; Ulrike Bacher; Alexander Kohlmann; Sonja Schindela; Tamara Alpermann; Wolfgang Kern; Susanne Schnittger; Torsten Haferlach
Journal:  Haematologica       Date:  2011-03-21       Impact factor: 9.941

4.  Clinical utility of microarray-based gene expression profiling in the diagnosis and subclassification of leukemia: report from the International Microarray Innovations in Leukemia Study Group.

Authors:  Torsten Haferlach; Alexander Kohlmann; Lothar Wieczorek; Giuseppe Basso; Geertruy Te Kronnie; Marie-Christine Béné; John De Vos; Jesus M Hernández; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Ken I Mills; Amanda Gilkes; Sabina Chiaretti; Sheila A Shurtleff; Thomas J Kipps; Laura Z Rassenti; Allen E Yeoh; Peter R Papenhausen; Wei-Min Liu; P Mickey Williams; Robin Foà
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2010-04-20       Impact factor: 44.544

Review 5.  Molecular signatures in acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors:  Krzysztof Mrózek; Michael D Radmacher; Clara D Bloomfield; Guido Marcucci
Journal:  Curr Opin Hematol       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 3.284

6.  Evaluation of expression of common genes in the intestine and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) associated with celiac disease.

Authors:  Ensieh Khalkhal; Fatemeh Nobakht; Mohammad Hossain Haidari; Zahra Razaghi; Mahsa Ghasemzad; Melika Sheikhan; Mohammad Rostami Nejad
Journal:  Gastroenterol Hepatol Bed Bench       Date:  2020

7.  Frequency and prognostic impact of CEBPA proximal, distal and core promoter methylation in normal karyotype AML: a study on 623 cases.

Authors:  Annette Fasan; Tamara Alpermann; Claudia Haferlach; Vera Grossmann; Andreas Roller; Alexander Kohlmann; Christiane Eder; Wolfgang Kern; Torsten Haferlach; Susanne Schnittger
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-02-01       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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