| Literature DB >> 30553474 |
Robyn T Sussman1, Sydney Shaffer1, Elizabeth M Azzato1, Daniel DeSloover1, Midhat S Farooqi1, Anders Meyer1, David B Lieberman1, Ashkan Bigdeli1, Carmela Paolillo1, Karthik Ganapathy1, Shrey Sukhadia1, Jason N Rosenbaum1, Robert D Daber1, Jennifer J D Morrissette2.
Abstract
One caveat of next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based clinical oncology testing is the high amount of input DNA required. We sought to develop a focused NGS panel that could capture hotspot regions in relevant genes requiring 0.5-10 ng input DNA. The resulting Penn Precision Panel (PPP) targeted 20 genes containing clinically significant variants relevant to many cancers. One hundred twenty-three samples were analyzed, including 83 solid tumor specimens derived from FFPE. Various input quantities of DNA (0.5-10 ng) were amplified with content-specific PCR primer pools, then sequenced on a MiSeq instrument (Illumina, Inc.) via paired-end, 2 × 186 base pair reads to an average read depth of greater than 6500x. Variants were detected using an in-house analysis pipeline. Clinical sensitivity and specificity were assessed using results from our previously validated solid tumor NGS panel; sensitivity of the PPP is 96.75% (387/400 variants) and specificity is 99.9% (8427/8428 base pairs). Variant allele frequencies (VAFs) are highly concordant across both assays (r = 0.98 p < 0.0001). The PPP is a robust, clinically validated test optimized for low-yield solid tumor specimens, capturing a high percentage of clinically relevant variants found by larger commercially available NGS panels while using only 0.5-10 ng of input DNA.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical NGS testing; Low-yield DNA specimen; Multi-gene panel; Solid tumor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30553474 DOI: 10.1016/j.cancergen.2018.08.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Genet