| Literature DB >> 35902443 |
Kaishi Satomi1,2,3, Akihiko Yoshida4, Yuko Matsushita5,6,7, Hirokazu Sugino4, Kenji Fujimoto5,8, Mai Honda-Kitahara5,6, Masamichi Takahashi6, Makoto Ohno6, Yasuji Miyakita6, Yoshitaka Narita6, Yasushi Yatabe4, Junji Shibahara9, Koichi Ichimura5,7.
Abstract
The current World Health Organization classification of diffuse astrocytic and oligodendroglial tumors requires the examination of isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) or IDH2 mutations. Conventional analysis tools, including Sanger DNA sequencing or pyrosequencing, fail in detecting these variants of low frequency owing to their limited sensitivity. Digital polymerase chain reaction (dPCR) is a recently developed, highly sensitive, and precise quantitative rare variant assay. This study aimed to establish a robust limit of quantitation of the dPCR assay to detect a small fraction of IDH1 R132H mutation. The dPCR assays with serially diluted IDH1 R132H constructs detected 0.05% or more of mutant IDH1 R132H in samples containing mutant DNA. The measured target/total value of the experiments was proportional to the dilution factors and was almost equal to the actual frequencies of the mutant alleles. Based on the average target/total values, together with a twofold standard deviation of the normal DNA, a limit of quantitation of 0.25% was set to secure a safe margin to judge the mutation status of the IDH1 R132H dPCR assay. In clinical settings, detecting IDH1 R132H using dPCR assays can validate ambiguous immunohistochemistry results even when conventional DNA sequencing cannot detect the mutation and assure diagnostic quality.Entities:
Keywords: Digital PCR; Glioma; IDH1 R132H mutation; Immunohistochemistry
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35902443 DOI: 10.1007/s10014-022-00442-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Tumor Pathol ISSN: 1433-7398 Impact factor: 3.154