| Literature DB >> 34074327 |
Jeff Simko1, Charles Y Chiu2,3,4, Wei Gu5,6,7,8, Eric Talevich9, Elaine Hsu10, Zhongxia Qi10, Anatoly Urisman1, Scot Federman10,11, Allan Gopez10,11, Shaun Arevalo10,11, Marc Gottschall10, Linda Liao12, Jack Tung13, Lei Chen12, Harumi Lim12, Chandler Ho12, Maya Kasowski13, Jean Oak13,12, Brittany J Holmes13,12, Iwei Yeh1, Jingwei Yu10, Linlin Wang10, Steve Miller10,11, Joseph L DeRisi14,15, Sonam Prakash10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) of body fluids is an emerging approach to identify occult pathogens in undiagnosed patients. We hypothesized that metagenomic testing can be simultaneously used to detect malignant neoplasms in addition to infectious pathogens.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34074327 PMCID: PMC8167833 DOI: 10.1186/s13073-021-00912-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 11.117
Fig. 1A Schematic of the bioinformatics pipeline. After whole genome sequencing of cell-free DNA from body fluids, adapter sequences are trimmed and aligned to the human genome. The cancer pipeline aligns human reads and counts reads over moving windows across the human genome [12, 17]. The microbial pipeline aligns non-human reads to a microbial database, taxonomically classifies the microbial aligned reads, and identifies pathogens [2, 18]. B Sample type composition of the 205 body fluid samples. C Contingency table comparing conventional cancer detection to sequencing in patients with malignancy. Negative controls did not have a history of cancer and were explained by infections with positive microbiological testing (top). Patients with cancer detected by positive cytology and/or flow cytometry testing of body fluid (bottom). Patients diagnosed with cancer but with negative or ambiguous detection based on conventional clinical testing in the same fluid by cytology or cytometry. D Detection accuracy and tumor fractions. Detection of malignancies through CNV detection in 2 cancer-positive case categories described in C. The “New” category refers to samples collected from patients with a new diagnosis who have no previous cancer history and have not been treated. Tumor fractions were estimated through the magnitude of copy changes detected (see online Methods, “Equation 1”)
Positive for cancer but negative by conventional testing (cytology/flow cytometry)
| Sample ID | Sample type | Presentation | Cancer type | New Dxa | Cytology (Flow cytometry if available) | Confirmation | NGS Pos for CNVs and EBV | CNV count by NGS | Tumor Fraction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PC37 | BAL | New lung nodules after chemotherapy, fever | Anaplastic large cell lymphoma | − | n/a | EBUS/FNA | − | 0 | 0.00 |
| PC38b | Pleural | Exudative pleural effusion, fever | Sarcoma | − | Benign | Tissue CNV correlation, clinical suspicion | + | 5+ | 0.62 |
| PC39b | Pleural | Lung masses (history of Leiomyosarcoma on chemotherapy), exudative pleural effusion, tachycardia, leukocytosis, dyspnea | Leiomyosarcoma | − | Benign | Tissue CNV correlated with NGS CNVs; imaging; clinical history | + | 5+ | 0.28 |
| PC40 | Peritoneal | Lung and liver metastasis, peritonitis (low SAAG/low protein), fever | Poorly differentiated carcinoma most consistent with neuroendocrine carcinoma | − | Benign | Autopsy | + | 5+ | 0.12 |
| PC41b | Pleural | Lung masses, pleural effusion, lymphadenopathy, hypotension, dyspnea | Undifferentiated carcinoma | + | Benign (negative) | Tissue based FoundationONE testing: MET amplification correlated with NGS amplification | + | 5+ | 0.056 |
| PC42 | Pleural | lymphadenopathy (cervical/thoracic), non-diagnostic biopsies (2), hypercalcemia, weight loss (history of disseminated coccidioidomycosis, breast cancer) | Unknown—presumptive lymphoproliferative disorder | + | Benign (negative) | Probable: High clinical suspicion of lymphoproliferative disorder +/− tuberculosis (working diagnosis) | +/EBV+ | 5+ | 0.32 |
| PC43 | Pleural | Liver masses, exudative pleural effusions, dyspnea, fatigue, weight loss | Unknown—presumptive hepatocellular carcinoma | + | Benign | Probable: High clinical suspicion | + | 5+ | 0.31 |
| PC44b | Pleural | Chest mass, pleural based lesions, dyspnea | Rhabdomyosarcoma | − | Benign (negative) | Tissue based UCSF500 testing: CNVs correlated | + | 1 | 0.66 |
| PC45 | Pleural | Exudative effusion, lymphadenopathy (recent diagnosis of Hodgkin lymphoma, untreated), weight loss | Hodgkin lymphoma | + | Benign (negative) | Clinical suspicion, recent tissue diagnosis without treatment, CNV decrease after therapy, and EBV decrease after therapy | +/EBV+ | 4 | 0.35 |
| PC46b | Pleural | Chronic pleural effusion requiring repeated drainage with known malignancy | Hodgkin lymphoma | − | Benign (negative) | Probable: High clinical suspicion | + | 5+ | 0.26 |
| PC47 | Peritoneal | Known relapsed malignancy | Diffuse large B cell lymphoma | − | Benign (negative) | Probable: High clinical suspicion of known DLBCL with suggestive imaging | − | 0 | 0.00 |
| PC48 | Peritoneal | Hepatic mass, ascites | Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma | + | Benign | Core Biopsy of liver: Adenocarcinoma | + | 5+ | 0.31 |
| PC49 | Pleural | Pleural effusion, recently treated community acquired pneumonia, recurrent fever | Invasive ductal carcinoma | + | Benign | Breast core biopsy shows invasive ductal carcinoma | − | 0 | 0.00 |
| PC50 | Pleural | Suspected malignant pleural effusion | Anal squamous cell carcinoma | − | Benign | Probable: High clinical suspicion for malignant effusion | + | 5+ | 0.61 |
| PC51 | Pleural | Lung mass, exudative effusion | Unknown—suspected cancer | + | Benign | Probable: High clinical suspicion | − | 0 | 0.00 |
| PC52 | Pleural | Known pulmonary metastasis | Colon adenocarcinoma | − | Benign | Probable: High clinical suspicion | + | 5+ | 0.52 |
| PC53 | BAL | Lung mass, pancreatic mass, night sweats, weight loss | Melanoma | + | Benign | FNA: Melanoma | + | 4 | 0.15 |
| PC54 | BAL | Lung mass, lymphadenopathy | Lung adenocarcinoma | + | Benign | FNA: Lung adenocarcinoma | + | 5+ | 0.11 |
| PC55 | Peritoneal | Ascites | Breast cancer | − | Benign (negative) | Probable: High clinical suspicion | + | 2 | 0.31 |
| PC56 | Pericardial | Effusions, fever, weakness | Castleman’s | + | Benign | Lymph node biopsy | − | 0 | 0.00 |
| PC57 | Pleural | Effusions, fever, weakness | Castleman’s | + | Benign | Lymph node biopsy | − | 0 | 0.00 |
| PC58 | BAL | Lung nodules, fever (known AML) | Acute myeloid leukemia | − | Benign | Cytogenetics (bone marrow) correlated with NGS CNVs | +c | 5+ | 0.40 |
| PC59 | Peritoneal | Liver masses, ascites | Cholangiocarcinoma | − | Benign | FNA: adenocarcinoma | + | 5+ | 0.55 |
| PC60 | Peritoneal | Liver masses, ascites | Hepatocellular carcinoma | − | Benign | FNA: Metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma | + | 5+ | 0.55 |
| PC61 | Pleural | Liver masses, exudative pleural effusion, lung nodules | Colon cancer | − | Benign | Probable: High clinical suspicion | − | 0 | 0.00 |
| PC62 | Peritoneal | Liver masses, ascites | Cholangiocarcinoma | − | Benign | FNA: adenocarcinoma | − | 0 | 0.00 |
| PC63b | BAL | Lung nodules, lymphadenopathy, non-diagnostic biopsies (5), eosinophilia, hypercalcemia | Myeloid neoplasm | + | Benign (negative) | Tissue FISH and cytogenetics (bone marrow) correlated with NGS CNVs: see Fig. | + | 5+ | 0.96 |
| PC64 | FNA | Lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, fever | Hodgkin lymphoma | + | Scant atypical lymphoid cells | Core Biopsy: Hodgkin lymphoma | − | 0 | 0.00 |
| PC65 | BAL | Lymphadenopathy | Lung adenocarcinoma | + | Benign | FNA: adenocarcinoma | − | 0 | 0.00 |
aNew Dx (diagnosis): either no history of the cancer or no treatment of a newly diagnosed cancer
bBody fluid is correlated with cancer tissue (see Fig. 2G, H for PC63 and Additional file 1 for all other cases)
cPlasma NGS (same protocol) 1 day prior shows a lower tumor fraction at 27% (versus 40% in the BAL)
Fig. 2Patient PC63 showing biopsies, mNGS pathogen/CNV results, and orthogonal confirmation. A Schematic of the biopsies performed. B–D Histology of the bone marrow, paratracheal lymph node, and lung wedge biopsy show increased eosinophils (arrowheads) that were morphologically normal and indistinguishable from reactive and benign eosinophils. E Bacterial profile from mNGS testing. No viral, fungal, or parasitic pathogens were detected. F Copy number plotting across the human genome derived from metagenomic sequencing data. Six chromosomal scale deletions and duplications are identified, 3 of which accounted for > 90% of the human DNA content. G FISH (fluorescence in situ hybridization) of wedge biopsy, confirming presence of matching clonal complex cytogenetics to BAL fluid in F. Scale bar, 5 μm. H Bone marrow biopsy, confirming presence of matching clonal complex cytogenetics to BAL fluid in F