| Literature DB >> 26671409 |
Felix Sahm1,2, Daniel Schrimpf1,2, David T W Jones3, Jochen Meyer2, Annekathrin Kratz1,2, David Reuss1,2, David Capper1,2, Christian Koelsche1,2, Andrey Korshunov1,2, Benedikt Wiestler4,5, Ivo Buchhalter6,7, Till Milde8,9, Florian Selt8,9, Dominik Sturm3,8, Marcel Kool3, Manuela Hummel10, Melanie Bewerunge-Hudler11, Christian Mawrin12, Ulrich Schüller13, Christine Jungk14, Antje Wick4,5, Olaf Witt8,9, Michael Platten4,15, Christel Herold-Mende14, Andreas Unterberg14, Stefan M Pfister3,8, Wolfgang Wick4,5, Andreas von Deimling16,17.
Abstract
With the number of prognostic and predictive genetic markers in neuro-oncology steadily growing, the need for comprehensive molecular analysis of neuropathology samples has vastly increased. We therefore developed a customized enrichment/hybrid-capture-based next-generation sequencing (NGS) gene panel comprising the entire coding and selected intronic and promoter regions of 130 genes recurrently altered in brain tumors, allowing for the detection of single nucleotide variations, fusions, and copy number aberrations. Optimization of probe design, library generation and sequencing conditions on 150 samples resulted in a 5-workday routine workflow from the formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded sample to neuropathological report. This protocol was applied to 79 retrospective cases with established molecular aberrations for validation and 71 prospective cases for discovery of potential therapeutic targets. Concordance of NGS compared to established, single biomarker methods was 98.0 %, with discrepancies resulting from one case where a TERT promoter mutation was not called by NGS and three ATRX mutations not being detected by Sanger sequencing. Importantly, in samples with low tumor cell content, NGS was able to identify mutant alleles that were not detectable by traditional methods. Information derived from NGS data identified potential targets for experimental therapy in 37/47 (79 %) glioblastomas, 9/10 (90 %) pilocytic astrocytomas, and 5/14 (36 %) medulloblastomas in the prospective target discovery cohort. In conclusion, we present the settings for high-throughput, adaptive next-generation sequencing in routine neuropathology diagnostics. Such an approach will likely become highly valuable in the near future for treatment decision making, as more therapeutic targets emerge and genetic information enters the classification of brain tumors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26671409 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-015-1519-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088