| Literature DB >> 21049055 |
Adam Abdool1, Amber C Donahue, Jay G Wohlgemuth, Chen-Hsiung Yeh.
Abstract
Current diagnostic screening strategies based on karyotyping or fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) for detection of chromosomal abnormalities in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) are laborious, time-consuming, costly, and have limitations in resolution. Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) can simultaneously detect copy number changes of multiple loci in one simple PCR reaction, making it an attractive alternative to FISH. To enhance the clinical robustness and further harness MLPA technology for routine laboratory operations, we have developed and validated a protocol for comprehensive, automatic data analysis and interpretation. A training set of 50 normal samples was used to establish reference ranges for each individual probe, for the calling of statistically significant copy number changes. The maximum normal ranges of 2 and 3 standard deviations (SD) are distributed between 0.82 and 1.18 (Mean ± 2SD, 95% CI, P = 0.05), and between 0.73 and 1.27 (Mean ± 3SD, 99% CI, P = 0.01), respectively. We found an excellent correlation between MLPA and FISH with 93.6% concordance (P<0.0001) from a testing cohort of 100 clinically suspected CLL cases. MLPA analyses done on 94/100 patients showed sensitivity and specificity of 94.2% and 92.9%, respectively. MLPA detected additional copy number gains on 18q21.1 and chromosome 19, and novel micro-deletions at 19q13.43 and 19p13.2 loci in six samples. Three FISH-failed samples were tested positive by MLPA, while three 13q- cases with a low percentage of leukemia cells (7%, 12% and 19%) were not detected by MLPA. The improved CLL MLPA represents a high-throughput, accurate, cost-effective and user-friendly platform that can be used as a first-line screening test in a clinical laboratory.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21049055 PMCID: PMC2963645 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0015407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Normal reference range established for each individual probe for CLL MLPA.
| Probe (gene/chromosome) | Normal range (Mean ± 2SD; 95% CI, | Normal range (Mean ± 3SD; 99% CI, |
|
| 0.84–1.16 | 0.76–1.24 |
|
| 0.89–1.11 | 0.84–1.16 |
|
| 0.85–1.15 | 0.78–1.22 |
|
| 0.87–1.13 | 0.80–1.20 |
|
| 0.84–1.16 | 0.76–1.24 |
|
| 0.88–1.12 | 0.82–1.18 |
|
| 0.91–1.09 | 0.86–1.15 |
|
| 0.82–1.18 | 0.73–1.27 |
|
| 0.86–1.14 | 0.83–1.17 |
|
| 0.87–1.13 | 0.85–1.15 |
|
| 0.89–1.11 | 0.83–1.17 |
|
| 0.88–1.12 | 0.82–1.18 |
|
| 0.87–1.13 | 0.81–1.19 |
|
| 0.89–1.11 | 0.84–1.16 |
|
| 0.87–1.13 | 0.80–1.20 |
|
| 0.87–1.13 | 0.80–1.20 |
|
| 0.85–1.15 | 0.78–1.22 |
|
| 0.87–1.13 | 0.80–1.20 |
|
| 0.83–1.17 | 0.74–1.26 |
|
| 0.83–1.17 | 0.81–1.19 |
|
| 0.83–1.17 | 0.81–1.19 |
|
| 0.84–1.16 | 0.76–1.24 |
|
| 0.86–1.14 | 0.79–1.21 |
|
| 0.86–1.14 | 0.80–1.20 |
|
| 0.89–1.11 | 0.83–1.16 |
|
| 0.89–1.11 | 0.83–1.17 |
|
| 0.89–1.11 | 0.83–1.17 |
*Both 95% and 99% confidence interval corresponding to normal DNA content of all probes are presented. These data were based on 50 DNA samples of blood from healthy controls.
Figure 1Representative MLPA analysis on CLL patients.
(a) Normalized ratio plot (relative copy number, RCN) from a CLL patient with trisomy 12 and 19, and 13q14 deletions. The data were normalized to those of normal controls. The reference ranges of 2 SD (Mean ± 2SD, 95% CI, P = 0.05) and 3 SD (Mean ± 3SD, 99% CI, P = 0.01) for each probe are shown by diamonds and squares, respectively. (b) MLPA analysis of copy number changes on multiple CLL samples are called and highlighted on a heatmap as blue (gain, ≥3SD), light blue (gain, ≥2SD), red (loss, ≤3SD) and pink (loss, ≤2SD) blocks that lie outside of reference ranges of each probe. Note that the high resolution of MLPA in several 13q- and 11q- cases can pinpoint deletion region down to a single gene level.
MLPA test for CLL: interpretative criteria and calling guidelines.
| Normalized probe ratio | Calling guidelines | Interpretation, |
| Within Mean ± 2SD | Duplicates show > = 50% probes in the cluster are within this range | Normal |
| Out of Mean ± 3SD | Duplicates show > = 1 probe in the cluster are out of this range | Deletion or Amplification, |
| Between Mean ± 2SD and Mean ± 3SD | Duplicates show > = 50% probes in the cluster are within this range | Loss or Gain, |
Frequency of genomic alterations detected for each chromosome in 100 suspected CLL cases by MLPA and FISH.
| Genomic alterations | MLPA cases (%) | FISH cases (%) |
| 13q- | 25 (25) | 26 (26) |
| 12 Trisomy | 8 (8) | 8 (8) |
| 11q- | 3 (3) | 3 (3) |
| 17p- | 3 (3) | 3 (3) |
| 18q+ | 1 (1) | NA |
| 19q13.43− | 1 (1) | NA |
| 19p13.2− | 1 (1) | NA |
Total cases include cases detected by FISH or by MLPA.
NA, not applicable.
Concordance of MLPA with FISH on 94 suspected CLL specimens.
| MLPA, n (%) | |||||
| FISH | Positive | Negative | Total | Concordance |
|
| Positive | 49 (94.2) | 3 (5.8) | 52 | 93.6% | <0.0001 |
| Negative | 3 (7.1) | 39 (92.9) | 42 | 93.6% | <0.0001 |
*All comparisons used two-tailed Fisher's exact test.
Figure 2Correlation between MLPA and FISH analyses on 13q14- samples.
(a) Normalized ratios by MLPA were grouped by the percentage of FISH-identified leukemia clones carrying 13q14 deletion. The distribution of MLPA ratios showed that 13q14- cells must represent at least 20% (if using 2SD as cutoff) or 40% (if using 3SD as cutoff) of the total population in a sample to be called a statistically significant copy number change. (b) Mixing study using a homozygous 13q- DNA spiked into normal control DNA to create samples containing 0, 10%, 20%, 50%, 75% or 100% alterations. This study also showed a 20% detection limit on 13q deletion by MLPA.