| Literature DB >> 34173019 |
Philipp Jurmeister1,2, Claudia Vollbrecht3,4, Korinna Jöhrens5,6, Daniela Aust5, Anke Behnke3, Albrecht Stenzinger7,8, Roland Penzel7, Volker Endris7, Peter Schirmacher7,8, Annette Fisseler-Eckhoff9, Jens Neumann10, Thomas Kirchner10,11, Reinhard Büttner12, Sabine Merkelbach-Bruse12, Hans Kreipe13, Danny Jonigk13, Wolfram Jochum14, Regulo Rodriguez14, Manfred Dietel3, David Horst3,15, Michael Hummel3, Maximilian von Laffert3.
Abstract
With this external quality assessment (EQA) scheme, we aim to investigate the diagnostic performance of the currently available methods for the detection of ALK alterations in non-small cell lung cancer on a national scale, namely, in situ hybridization (ISH), immunohistochemistry (IHC), and RNA/DNA sequencing (NGS). The EQA scheme cohort consisted of ten specimens, including four ALK positive and six ALK negative samples, which were thoroughly pretested using IHC, ISH, and RNA/DNA NGS. Unstained tumor sections were provided to the 57 participants, and the results were retrieved via an online questionnaire. ISH was used by 29, IHC by 38, and RNA/DNA sequencing by 19 participants. Twenty-eight institutions (97%) passed the ring trial using ISH, 33 (87%) by using IHC, and 18 (95%) by using NGS. The highest sensitivity and interrater agreement (Fleiss ' kappa) was observed for RNA/DNA sequencing (99%, 0.975), followed by ISH (94%, 0.898) and IHC (92%, 0.888). However, the proportion of samples that were not evaluable due to bad tissue quality was also higher for RNA/DNA sequencing (4%) compared with ISH (0.7%) and IHC (0.5%). While all three methods produced reliable results between the different institutions, the highest sensitivity and concordance were observed for RNA/DNA sequencing. These findings encourage the broad implementation of this method in routine diagnostic, although the application might be limited by technical capacity, economical restrictions, and tissue quality of formalin-fixed samples.Entities:
Keywords: Anaplastic lymphoma kinase; External quality assessment; Next-generation sequencing; Non-small cell lung cancer; Round robin
Year: 2021 PMID: 34173019 DOI: 10.1007/s00428-021-03106-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virchows Arch ISSN: 0945-6317 Impact factor: 4.064