Lih Chih-Jian, Sims David J, Harrington Robin D, Polley Eric C, Zhao Yingdong, Mehaffey Michele G, Forbes Thomas D, Das Biswajit, Walsh William D, Datta Vivekananda, Harper Kneshay N, Bouk Courtney H, Rubinstein Lawrence V, Simon Richard M, Conley Barbara A, Chen Alice P, Kummar Shivaani, Doroshow James H, Williams Paul M
Molecular Characterization and Clinical Assay Development Laboratory, Leidos Biomedical Research Inc., and Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, Frederick, Maryland.
Molecular Characterization and Clinical Assay Development Laboratory, Leidos Biomedical Research Inc., and Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, Frederick, Maryland.
J Mol Diagn. 2016 Jan;18(1):51-67. doi: 10.1016/j.jmoldx.2015.07.006. Epub 2015 Nov 18.
Robust and analytically validated assays are essential for clinical studies. We outline an analytical validation study of a targeted next-generation sequencing mutation-detection assay used for patient selection in the National Cancer Institute Molecular Profiling-Based Assignment of Cancer Therapy (NCI-MPACT) trial (NCT01827384). Using DNA samples from normal or tumor cell lines and xenografts with known variants, we assessed the sensitivity, specificity, and reproducibility of the NCI-MPACT assay in five variant types: single-nucleotide variants (SNVs), SNVs at homopolymeric (HP) regions (≥3 identical bases), small insertions/deletions (indels), large indels (gap ≥4 bp), and indels at HP regions. The assay achieved sensitivities of 100% for 64 SNVs, nine SNVs at HP regions, and 11 large indels, 83.33% for six indels, and 93.33% for 15 indels at HP regions. Zero false positives (100% specificity) were found in 380 actionable mutation loci in 96 runs of haplotype map cells. Reproducibility analysis showed 96.3% to 100% intraoperator and 98.1% to 100% interoperator mean concordance in detected variants and 100% reproducibility in treatment selection. To date, 38 tumors have been screened, 34 passed preanalytical quality control, and 18 had actionable mutations for treatment assignment. The NCI-MPACT assay is well suited for its intended investigational use and can serve as a template for developing next-generation sequencing assays for other cancer clinical trial applications.
稳健且经过分析验证的检测方法对于临床研究至关重要。我们概述了一项针对下一代测序突变检测方法的分析验证研究,该方法用于美国国立癌症研究所基于分子谱分析的癌症治疗分配(NCI-MPACT)试验(NCT01827384)中的患者选择。使用来自正常或肿瘤细胞系以及具有已知变异的异种移植的DNA样本,我们评估了NCI-MPACT检测方法在五种变异类型中的敏感性、特异性和可重复性:单核苷酸变异(SNV)、同聚物(HP)区域(≥3个相同碱基)的SNV、小插入/缺失(indel)、大indel(缺口≥4 bp)以及HP区域的indel。该检测方法对64个SNV、9个HP区域的SNV和11个大indel的敏感性达到100%,对6个indel的敏感性为83.33%,对15个HP区域的indel的敏感性为93.33%。在96次单倍型图谱细胞运行中,380个可操作突变位点未发现假阳性(特异性为100%)。重复性分析显示,检测到的变异在操作员内的平均一致性为96.3%至100%,操作员间为98.1%至100%,治疗选择的重复性为100%。迄今为止,已筛查了38个肿瘤,34个通过了分析前质量控制,18个具有可操作的突变用于治疗分配。NCI-MPACT检测方法非常适合其预期的研究用途,可作为开发用于其他癌症临床试验应用的下一代测序检测方法的模板。