| Literature DB >> 30119077 |
Florence Koeppel, Alexandre Bobard1, Céline Lefebvre2, Marion Pedrero2, Marc Deloger3, Yannick Boursin3, Catherine Richon, Romy Chen-Min-Tao3, Guillaume Robert3, Guillaume Meurice3, Etienne Rouleau, Stefan Michiels4, Christophe Massard, Jean-Yves Scoazec5, Eric Solary, Jean-Charles Soria, Fabrice André, Ludovic Lacroix.
Abstract
Comprehensive genomic profiling using high-throughput sequencing brings a wealth of information, and its place in the clinical setting has been increasingly prominent. This review emphasizes the utility of whole-exome sequencing (WES) and transcriptome sequencing (RNAseq) in patient care and clinical research, based on published reports as well as our experience with the MOSCATO-01 (MOlecular Screening for CAncer Treatment Optimization) molecular triage trial at Gustave Roussy Cancer Center. In this trial, all contributive samples of patients with advanced solid tumors were analyzed prospectively with targeted gene sequencing (TGS) and comparative genomic hybridization. In addition, 92 consecutive metastatic patients with contributive biopsies were sequenced for WES and RNAseq and compared with TGS and comparative genomic hybridization. Whole-exome sequencing allowed the reporting of additional variants in relevant genes in 38% of patients. Mutation detection sensitivity of WES was 95% compared with TGS. Additional information derived from WES and RNAseq could influence clinical decision, including fusion transcripts, expression levels, allele-specific expression, alternate transcripts, RNA-based pathogen diagnostic, tumor mutation load, mutational signatures, expression signatures, HLA genotyping, and neoepitope prediction. The current challenge is to be able to process the large-scale data from these comprehensive genome-wide technologies in an efficient way.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30119077 DOI: 10.1097/PPO.0000000000000322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer J ISSN: 1528-9117 Impact factor: 3.360