| Literature DB >> 23950653 |
Annalisa Altimari1, Dario de Biase, Giovanna De Maglio, Elisa Gruppioni, Elisa Capizzi, Alessio Degiovanni, Antonia D'Errico, Annalisa Pession, Stefano Pizzolitto, Michelangelo Fiorentino, Giovanni Tallini.
Abstract
Detection of KRAS mutations in archival pathology samples is critical for therapeutic appropriateness of anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies in colorectal cancer. We compared the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of Sanger sequencing, ARMS-Scorpion (TheraScreen®) real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR), pyrosequencing, chip array hybridization, and 454 next-generation sequencing to assess KRAS codon 12 and 13 mutations in 60 nonconsecutive selected cases of colorectal cancer. Twenty of the 60 cases were detected as wild-type KRAS by all methods with 100% specificity. Among the 40 mutated cases, 13 were discrepant with at least one method. The sensitivity was 85%, 90%, 93%, and 92%, and the accuracy was 90%, 93%, 95%, and 95% for Sanger sequencing, TheraScreen real-time PCR, pyrosequencing, and chip array hybridization, respectively. The main limitation of Sanger sequencing was its low analytical sensitivity, whereas TheraScreen real-time PCR, pyrosequencing, and chip array hybridization showed higher sensitivity but suffered from the limitations of predesigned assays. Concordance between the methods was k = 0.79 for Sanger sequencing and k > 0.85 for the other techniques. Tumor cell enrichment correlated significantly with the abundance of KRAS-mutated deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), evaluated as ΔCt for TheraScreen real-time PCR (P = 0.03), percentage of mutation for pyrosequencing (P = 0.001), ratio for chip array hybridization (P = 0.003), and percentage of mutation for 454 next-generation sequencing (P = 0.004). Also, 454 next-generation sequencing showed the best cross correlation for quantification of mutation abundance compared with all the other methods (P < 0.001). Our comparison showed the superiority of next-generation sequencing over the other techniques in terms of sensitivity and specificity. Next-generation sequencing will replace Sanger sequencing as the reference technique for diagnostic detection of KRAS mutation in archival tumor tissues.Entities:
Keywords: KRAS mutations; colorectal cancer; next-generation sequencing; pyrosequencing; real-time polymerase chain reaction; targeted therapy
Year: 2013 PMID: 23950653 PMCID: PMC3741083 DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S42369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Onco Targets Ther ISSN: 1178-6930 Impact factor: 4.147
Summary of cases with discrepant results when Sanger sequencing, real-time PCR with the TheraScreen® kit, pyrosequencing, chip array infiniti® assay, and 454 next-generation sequencing were used to detect KRAS mutations in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded samples
| Sample | Tumor cell enrichment | Sanger sequencing | TheraScreen real-time PCR | Pyrosequencing | Chip array assay | NGS 454 | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 50% | Gly13Cys | WT | Gly13Cys | Gly13Cys | Gly13Cys | Mutation not in the TheraScreen kit |
| 17 | 20% | WT | Gly12Asp | Gly12Asp | Gly12Asp | Gly12Asp | Sanger fails, low enrichment |
| 20 | 90% | Gly13Cys | WT | Gly13Cys | Gly13Cys | Gly13Cys | Mutation not in the TheraScreen kit |
| 22 | 20% | WT | Gly12Val | Gly12Val | Gly12Val | Gly12Val | Sanger fails, low enrichment |
| 25 | 80% | Gly12Cys | Gly12Cys | WT | WT | Gly12Cys | Pyrosequencing and chip array fail, codon 11 mutation |
| 37 | 30% | WT | Gly13Asp | Gly13Asp | Gly13Asp | Gly13Asp | Sanger fails, low enrichment |
| 39 | 60% | Gly13Val | WT | Gly13Val | Gly13Val | Gly13Val | Mutation not in the TheraScreen kit |
| 42 | 5% | WT | Gly12Val | WT | WT | Gly12Val | Detected only by NGS and TheraScreen kit, low enrichment |
| 44 | 5% | WT | Gly13Asp | Gly13Asp | Gly13Asp | Gly13Asp | Only Sanger fails, low enrichment |
| 45 | 5% | WT | Gly13Asp | WT | WT | Gly13Asp | Detected only by NGS and TheraScreen kit, low enrichment |
| 52 | 30% | Gly13Asp | Gly13Asp | Gly13Asp | N/A | Gly13Asp | Chip array fails, low DNA concentration |
| 54 | 80% | Gly13Cys | WT | Gly13Cys | Gly13Cys | Gly13Cys | Mutation not in the TheraScreen kit |
| 60 | 60% | Gly12Phe | Gly12Val | Gly12Phe | Gly12Phe | Gly12Phe | Double point mutation in codon 12, detected by all methods; TheraScreen kit fails to detect Phe substitution |
Abbreviations: PCR, polymerase chain reaction; WT, wild type; N/A, not amplified; NGS, next-generation sequencing; DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid.
Concordance, sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of Sanger sequencing, real-time polymerase chain reaction with TheraScreen® kit, pyrosequencing, and chip array infiniti® assay measured using 454 next-generation sequencing as the reference method
| Method | Kappa of concordance | Sensitivity | Specificity | Accuracy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sanger sequencing | 0.791 | 34/40 (85%) | 100% | 54/60 (90%) |
| TheraScreen (ΔCt) | 0.857 | 36/40 (90%) | 100% | 56/60 (93%) |
| Pyrosequencing (percent mutated) | 0.892 | 37/40 (93%) | 100% | 57/60 (95%) |
| Chip array assay (ratio) | 0.891 | 36/39 (92%) | 100% | 56/59 (95%) |
Note:
One sample not assessed, values calculated on 59/60 cases.
Statistical correlation between tumor cell enrichment (neoplastic to non-neoplastic cell ratio evaluated on histology sections) and quantification of KRAS mutation abundance according to Sanger sequencing, real-time polymerase chain reaction with TheraScreen® kit, pyrosequencing, chip array infiniti® assay, and 454 next-generation sequencing
| Method (quantification criteria) | Tumor cell enrichment | TheraScreen | Pyrosequencing | Chip array assay | NGS 454 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sanger sequencing | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| TheraScreen (ΔCt) | 0.030 | – | – | – | – |
| Pyrosequencing (% mutated) | 0.007 | 0.002 | – | – | – |
| Chip array assay (ratio) | 0.003 | 0.004 | <0.001 | – | – |
| NGS 454 (% mutated) | 0.004 | <0.001 | <0.001 | <0.001 | – |
Notes:P value < 0.05 considered statistically significant.
No precise quantification can be achieved with Sanger sequencing.
Abbreviations: N/A, not amplified; NGS, next-generation sequencing.