Jonathan Buckley , Ryan J. Schmidt , Dejerianne Ostrow , Dennis Maglinte , Moiz Bootwalla , David Ruble , Ananthanarayanan Govindarajan , Jianling Ji , Alexandra E. Kovach , Etan Orgel , Gordana Raca , Fariba Navid , Leo Mascarenhas , Bruce Pawel , Nathan Robison , Xiaowu Gai , Jaclyn A. Biegel
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This study reports the development of an exome capture-based RNA-sequencing assay to detect recurring and novel fusions in hematologic, solid, and central nervous system tumors. The assay used Twist Comprehensive Exome capture with either fresh or formalin-fixed samples and a bioinformatic platform that provides fusion detection, prioritization, and downstream curation. A minimum of 50 million uniquely mapped reads, a consensus read alignment/fusion calling approach using four callers (Arriba, FusionCatcher, STAR-Fusion, and Dragen), and custom software were used to integrate, annotate, and rank the candidate fusion calls. In an evaluation of 50 samples, the number of calls varied substantially by caller, from a mean of 24.8 with STAR-Fusion to 259.6 with FusionCatcher; only 1.1% of calls were made by all four callers. Therefore a filtering and ranking algorithm was developed based on multiple criteria, including number of supporting reads, calling consensus, genes involved, and cross-reference against databases of known cancer-associated or likely false-positive fusions. This approach was highly effective in pinpointing known clinically relevant fusions, ranking them first in 47 of 50 samples (94%). Detection of pathogenic gene fusions in three diagnostically challenging cases highlights the importance of a genome-wide and nontargeted method for fusion detection in pediatric cancer.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics, the official publication of the Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP), co-owned by the American Society for Investigative Pathology (ASIP), seeks to publish high quality original papers on scientific advances in the translation and validation of molecular discoveries in medicine into the clinical diagnostic setting, and the description and application of technological advances in the field of molecular diagnostic medicine. The editors welcome for review articles that contain: novel discoveries or clinicopathologic correlations including studies in oncology, infectious diseases, inherited diseases, predisposition to disease, clinical informatics, or the description of polymorphisms linked to disease states or normal variations; the application of diagnostic methodologies in clinical trials; or the development of new or improved molecular methods which may be applied to diagnosis or monitoring of disease or disease predisposition.