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Concordance between genomic alterations assessed by next-generation sequencing in tumor tissue or circulating cell-free DNA

Genomic analysis of tumor tissue is the standard technique for identifying DNA alterations in malignancies. Genomic analysis of circulating tumor cell-free DNA (cfDNA) represents a relatively non-invasive method of assessing genomic alterations using peripheral blood. We compared the concordance of...

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Autores principales: Chae, Young Kwang, Davis, Andrew A., Carneiro, Benedito A., Chandra, Sunandana, Mohindra, Nisha, Kalyan, Aparna, Kaplan, Jason, Matsangou, Maria, Pai, Sachin, Costa, Ricardo, Jovanovic, Borko, Cristofanilli, Massimo, Platanias, Leonidas C., Giles, Francis J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5323161/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27588476
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.11692
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author Chae, Young Kwang
Davis, Andrew A.
Carneiro, Benedito A.
Chandra, Sunandana
Mohindra, Nisha
Kalyan, Aparna
Kaplan, Jason
Matsangou, Maria
Pai, Sachin
Costa, Ricardo
Jovanovic, Borko
Cristofanilli, Massimo
Platanias, Leonidas C.
Giles, Francis J.
author_facet Chae, Young Kwang
Davis, Andrew A.
Carneiro, Benedito A.
Chandra, Sunandana
Mohindra, Nisha
Kalyan, Aparna
Kaplan, Jason
Matsangou, Maria
Pai, Sachin
Costa, Ricardo
Jovanovic, Borko
Cristofanilli, Massimo
Platanias, Leonidas C.
Giles, Francis J.
author_sort Chae, Young Kwang
collection PubMed
description Genomic analysis of tumor tissue is the standard technique for identifying DNA alterations in malignancies. Genomic analysis of circulating tumor cell-free DNA (cfDNA) represents a relatively non-invasive method of assessing genomic alterations using peripheral blood. We compared the concordance of genomic alterations between cfDNA and tissue biopsies in this retrospective study. Twenty-eight patients with advanced solid tumors with paired next-generation sequencing tissue and cfDNA biopsies were identified. Sixty-five genes were common to both assays. Concordance was defined as the presence or absence of the identical genomic alteration(s) in a single gene on both molecular platforms. Including all aberrations, the average number of alterations per patient for tissue and cfDNA analysis was 4.82 and 2.96, respectively. When eliminating alterations not detectable in the cfDNA assay, mean number of alterations for tissue and cfDNA was 3.21 and 2.96, respectively. Overall, concordance was 91.9–93.9%. However, the concordance rate decreased to 11.8–17.1% when considering only genes with reported genomic alterations in either assay. Over 50% of mutations detected in either technique were not detected using the other biopsy technique, indicating a potential complementary role of each assay. Across 5 genes (TP53, EGFR, KRAS, APC, CDKN2A), sensitivity and specificity were 59.1% and 94.8%, respectively. Potential explanations for the lack of concordance include differences in assay platform, spatial and temporal factors, tumor heterogeneity, interval treatment, subclones, and potential germline DNA contamination. These results highlight the importance of prospective studies to evaluate concordance of genomic findings between distinct platforms that ultimately may inform treatment decisions.
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spelling pubmed-53231612017-03-23 Concordance between genomic alterations assessed by next-generation sequencing in tumor tissue or circulating cell-free DNA Chae, Young Kwang Davis, Andrew A. Carneiro, Benedito A. Chandra, Sunandana Mohindra, Nisha Kalyan, Aparna Kaplan, Jason Matsangou, Maria Pai, Sachin Costa, Ricardo Jovanovic, Borko Cristofanilli, Massimo Platanias, Leonidas C. Giles, Francis J. Oncotarget Research Paper Genomic analysis of tumor tissue is the standard technique for identifying DNA alterations in malignancies. Genomic analysis of circulating tumor cell-free DNA (cfDNA) represents a relatively non-invasive method of assessing genomic alterations using peripheral blood. We compared the concordance of genomic alterations between cfDNA and tissue biopsies in this retrospective study. Twenty-eight patients with advanced solid tumors with paired next-generation sequencing tissue and cfDNA biopsies were identified. Sixty-five genes were common to both assays. Concordance was defined as the presence or absence of the identical genomic alteration(s) in a single gene on both molecular platforms. Including all aberrations, the average number of alterations per patient for tissue and cfDNA analysis was 4.82 and 2.96, respectively. When eliminating alterations not detectable in the cfDNA assay, mean number of alterations for tissue and cfDNA was 3.21 and 2.96, respectively. Overall, concordance was 91.9–93.9%. However, the concordance rate decreased to 11.8–17.1% when considering only genes with reported genomic alterations in either assay. Over 50% of mutations detected in either technique were not detected using the other biopsy technique, indicating a potential complementary role of each assay. Across 5 genes (TP53, EGFR, KRAS, APC, CDKN2A), sensitivity and specificity were 59.1% and 94.8%, respectively. Potential explanations for the lack of concordance include differences in assay platform, spatial and temporal factors, tumor heterogeneity, interval treatment, subclones, and potential germline DNA contamination. These results highlight the importance of prospective studies to evaluate concordance of genomic findings between distinct platforms that ultimately may inform treatment decisions. Impact Journals LLC 2016-08-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5323161/ /pubmed/27588476 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.11692 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Chae et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Chae, Young Kwang
Davis, Andrew A.
Carneiro, Benedito A.
Chandra, Sunandana
Mohindra, Nisha
Kalyan, Aparna
Kaplan, Jason
Matsangou, Maria
Pai, Sachin
Costa, Ricardo
Jovanovic, Borko
Cristofanilli, Massimo
Platanias, Leonidas C.
Giles, Francis J.
Concordance between genomic alterations assessed by next-generation sequencing in tumor tissue or circulating cell-free DNA
title Concordance between genomic alterations assessed by next-generation sequencing in tumor tissue or circulating cell-free DNA
title_full Concordance between genomic alterations assessed by next-generation sequencing in tumor tissue or circulating cell-free DNA
title_fullStr Concordance between genomic alterations assessed by next-generation sequencing in tumor tissue or circulating cell-free DNA
title_full_unstemmed Concordance between genomic alterations assessed by next-generation sequencing in tumor tissue or circulating cell-free DNA
title_short Concordance between genomic alterations assessed by next-generation sequencing in tumor tissue or circulating cell-free DNA
title_sort concordance between genomic alterations assessed by next-generation sequencing in tumor tissue or circulating cell-free dna
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5323161/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27588476
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.11692
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