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Validation of the high-performance of pyrosequencing for clinical MGMT testing on a cohort of glioblastoma patients from a prospective dedicated multicentric trial

BACKGROUND: The goal of this prospective multicentric trial was to validate a technique that allowed for MGMT promoter methylation analysis in routine clinical practice. METHODS: The MGMT status of 139 glioblastoma patients, whom had received standard first line treatment, was determined using pyros...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Quillien, Véronique, Lavenu, Audrey, Ducray, François, Joly, Marie-Odile, Chinot, Olivier, Fina, Frédéric, Sanson, Marc, Carpentier, Catherine, Karayan-Tapon, Lucie, Rivet, Pierre, Entz-Werle, Natacha, Legrain, Michèle, Zalcman, Emmanuèle Lechapt, Levallet, Guenaelle, Escande, Fabienne, Ramirez, Carole, Chiforeanu, Dan, Vauleon, Elodie, Figarella-Branger, Dominique
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5308700/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27542245
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.11322
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: The goal of this prospective multicentric trial was to validate a technique that allowed for MGMT promoter methylation analysis in routine clinical practice. METHODS: The MGMT status of 139 glioblastoma patients, whom had received standard first line treatment, was determined using pyrosequencing (PSQ) and a semi-quantitative Methylation-specific PCR (sqMS-PCR) method, using both frozen and formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded FFPE samples. Eight participating centers locally performed the analysis, including external quality controls. RESULTS: There was a strong correlation between results from FFPE and frozen samples. With cut-offs of 12% and 13%, 98% and 91% of samples were identically classified with PSQ and sqMS-PCR respectively. In 12% of cases frozen samples were excluded because they had a low percentage of tumor cells. In 5-6% of cases the analysis was not feasible on FFPE samples. The optimized risk cut-offs were higher in both techniques when using FFPE samples, in comparison to frozen samples. For sqMS-PCR, we validated a cut-off between 13-15% to dichotomize patients. For PSQ, patients with a low level of methylation (<= 8%) had a median progression-free survival under 9 months, as compared with more than 15.5 months for those with a level above 12%. For intermediate values (9-12%), more discordant results between FFPE and frozen samples were observed and there was not a clear benefit of temozolomide treatment, which indicated a “grey zone”. CONCLUSIONS: MGMT status can reliably be investigated in local laboratories. PSQ is the ideal choice as proven by strong interlaboratory reproducibility, along with threshold agreements across independent studies.