| Literature DB >> 28802831 |
Julie W Reeser1, Dorrelyn Martin1, Jharna Miya1, Esko A Kautto1, Ezra Lyon1, Eliot Zhu1, Michele R Wing1, Amy Smith1, Matthew Reeder1, Eric Samorodnitsky1, Hannah Parks1, Karan R Naik1, Joseph Gozgit2, Nicholas Nowacki3, Kurtis D Davies4, Marileila Varella-Garcia4, Lianbo Yu5, Aharon G Freud3, Joshua Coleman3, Dara L Aisner4, Sameek Roychowdhury6.
Abstract
Kinase gene fusions are important drivers of oncogenic transformation and can be inhibited with targeted therapies. Clinical grade diagnostics using RNA sequencing to detect gene rearrangements in solid tumors are limited, and the few that are available require prior knowledge of fusion break points. To address this, we have analytically validated a targeted RNA sequencing assay (OSU-SpARKFuse) for fusion detection that interrogates complete transcripts from 93 kinase and transcription factor genes. From a total of 74 positive and 36 negative control samples, OSU-SpARKFuse had 93.3% sensitivity and 100% specificity for fusion detection. Assessment of repeatability and reproducibility revealed 96.3% and 94.4% concordance between intrarun and interrun technical replicates, respectively. Application of this assay on prospective patient samples uncovered OLFM4 as a novel RET fusion partner in a small-bowel cancer and led to the discovery of a KLK2-FGFR2 fusion in a patient with prostate cancer who subsequently underwent treatment with a pan-fibroblast growth factor receptor inhibitor. Beyond fusion detection, OSU-SpARKFuse has built-in capabilities for discovery research, including gene expression analysis, detection of single-nucleotide variants, and identification of alternative splicing events.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28802831 PMCID: PMC5975628 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmoldx.2017.05.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Diagn ISSN: 1525-1578 Impact factor: 5.568