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Sequencing and curation strategies for identifying candidate glioblastoma treatments

BACKGROUND: Prompted by the revolution in high-throughput sequencing and its potential impact for treating cancer patients, we initiated a clinical research study to compare the ability of different sequencing assays and analysis methods to analyze glioblastoma tumors and generate real-time potentia...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Frank, Mayu O., Koyama, Takahiko, Rhrissorrakrai, Kahn, Robine, Nicolas, Utro, Filippo, Emde, Anne-Katrin, Chen, Bo-Juen, Arora, Kanika, Shah, Minita, Geiger, Heather, Felice, Vanessa, Dikoglu, Esra, Rahman, Sadia, Fang, Alice, Vacic, Vladimir, Bergmann, Ewa A., Vogel, Julia L. Moore, Reeves, Catherine, Khaira, Depinder, Calabro, Anthony, Kim, Duyang, Lamendola-Essel, Michelle F., Esteves, Cecilia, Agius, Phaedra, Stolte, Christian, Boockvar, John, Demopoulos, Alexis, Placantonakis, Dimitris G., Golfinos, John G., Brennan, Cameron, Bruce, Jeffrey, Lassman, Andrew B., Canoll, Peter, Grommes, Christian, Daras, Mariza, Diamond, Eli, Omuro, Antonio, Pentsova, Elena, Orange, Dana E., Harvey, Stephen J., Posner, Jerome B., Michelini, Vanessa V., Jobanputra, Vaidehi, Zody, Michael C., Kelly, John, Parida, Laxmi, Wrzeszczynski, Kazimierz O., Royyuru, Ajay K., Darnell, Robert B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6485090/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31023376
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12920-019-0500-0
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Prompted by the revolution in high-throughput sequencing and its potential impact for treating cancer patients, we initiated a clinical research study to compare the ability of different sequencing assays and analysis methods to analyze glioblastoma tumors and generate real-time potential treatment options for physicians. METHODS: A consortium of seven institutions in New York City enrolled 30 patients with glioblastoma and performed tumor whole genome sequencing (WGS) and RNA sequencing (RNA-seq; collectively WGS/RNA-seq); 20 of these patients were also analyzed with independent targeted panel sequencing. We also compared results of expert manual annotations with those from an automated annotation system, Watson Genomic Analysis (WGA), to assess the reliability and time required to identify potentially relevant pharmacologic interventions. RESULTS: WGS/RNAseq identified more potentially actionable clinical results than targeted panels in 90% of cases, with an average of 16-fold more unique potentially actionable variants identified per individual; 84 clinically actionable calls were made using WGS/RNA-seq that were not identified by panels. Expert annotation and WGA had good agreement on identifying variants [mean sensitivity = 0.71, SD = 0.18 and positive predictive value (PPV) = 0.80, SD = 0.20] and drug targets when the same variants were called (mean sensitivity = 0.74, SD = 0.34 and PPV = 0.79, SD = 0.23) across patients. Clinicians used the information to modify their treatment plan 10% of the time. CONCLUSION: These results present the first comprehensive comparison of technical and machine augmented analysis of targeted panel and WGS/RNA-seq to identify potential cancer treatments.