| Literature DB >> 27121471 |
Thomas McKerrell1, Thaidy Moreno2, Hannes Ponstingl3, Niccolo Bolli4, João M L Dias5, German Tischler3, Vincenza Colonna6, Bridget Manasse7, Anthony Bench7, David Bloxham7, Bram Herman8, Danielle Fletcher8, Naomi Park3, Michael A Quail3, Nicla Manes9, Clare Hodkinson10, Joanna Baxter10, Jorge Sierra11, Theodora Foukaneli7, Alan J Warren12, Jianxiang Chi13, Paul Costeas13, Roland Rad14, Brian Huntly12, Carolyn Grove15, Zemin Ning3, Chris Tyler-Smith3, Ignacio Varela2, Mike Scott16, Josep Nomdedeu11, Ville Mustonen3, George S Vassiliou1.
Abstract
The diagnosis of hematologic malignancies relies on multidisciplinary workflows involving morphology, flow cytometry, cytogenetic, and molecular genetic analyses. Advances in cancer genomics have identified numerous recurrent mutations with clear prognostic and/or therapeutic significance to different cancers. In myeloid malignancies, there is a clinical imperative to test for such mutations in mainstream diagnosis; however, progress toward this has been slow and piecemeal. Here we describe Karyogene, an integrated targeted resequencing/analytical platform that detects nucleotide substitutions, insertions/deletions, chromosomal translocations, copy number abnormalities, and zygosity changes in a single assay. We validate the approach against 62 acute myeloid leukemia, 50 myelodysplastic syndrome, and 40 blood DNA samples from individuals without evidence of clonal blood disorders. We demonstrate robust detection of sequence changes in 49 genes, including difficult-to-detect mutations such as FLT3 internal-tandem and mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) partial-tandem duplications, and clinically significant chromosomal rearrangements including MLL translocations to known and unknown partners, identifying the novel fusion gene MLL-DIAPH2 in the process. Additionally, we identify most significant chromosomal gains and losses, and several copy neutral loss-of-heterozygosity mutations at a genome-wide level, including previously unreported changes such as homozygosity for DNMT3A R882 mutations. Karyogene represents a dependable genomic diagnosis platform for translational research and for the clinical management of myeloid malignancies, which can be readily adapted for use in other cancers.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27121471 PMCID: PMC4937362 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2015-11-683334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 25.476