National Center for Clinical Laboratories, Beijing Hospital, National Center of Gerontology, Beijing, People's Republic of China.
Beijing Engineering Research Center of Laboratory Medicine, Beijing Hospital, Beijing, People's Republic of China.
Oncologist. 2020 Mar;25(3):218-228. doi: 10.1634/theoncologist.2019-0239. Epub 2019 Aug 30.
With the accelerated development of next-generation sequencing (NGS), identified variants, and targeted therapies, clinicians who confront the complicated and multifarious genetic information may not effectively incorporate NGS-based circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis into routine patient care. Consequently, standardized ctDNA testing reports are of vital importance. In an effort to guarantee high-quality reporting performance, we conducted an investigation of the current detection and reporting practices for NGS-based ctDNA analysis.
A set of simulated ctDNA samples with known variants at known allelic frequencies and a corresponding case scenario were distributed to 66 genetic testing laboratories for ctDNA analysis. Written reports were collected to evaluate the detection accuracy, reporting integrity, and information sufficiency using 21 predefined criteria.
Current reporting practices for NGS-based ctDNA analysis were found to be far from satisfactory, especially regarding testing interpretation and methodological details. Only 42.4% of laboratories reported the results in complete concordance with the expected results. Moreover, 74.2% of reports only listed aberrations with direct and well-known treatment consequences for the tumor type in question. Genetic aberrations for which experimental agents and/or drug access programs are available may thus be overlooked. Furthermore, methodological details for the interpretation of results were missing from the majority of reports (87.9%).
This proof-of-principle study suggests that the capacity for accurate identification of variants, rational interpretation of genotypes, comprehensive recommendation of potential medications, and detailed description of methodologies need to be further improved before ctDNA analysis can be formally implemented in the clinic.
Accurate, comprehensive, and standardized clinical sequencing reports can help to translate complex genetic information into patient-centered clinical decisions, thereby shepherding precision oncology into daily practice. However, standards, guidelines, and quality requirements for clinical reports of next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis are currently absent. By using a set of simulated clinical ctDNA samples and a corresponding case scenario, current practices were evaluated to identify deficiencies in clinical sequencing reports of ctDNA analysis. The recommendations provided here may serve as a roadmap for the improved implementation of NGS-based ctDNA analysis in the clinic.
随着下一代测序(NGS)技术的飞速发展,以及越来越多的变异被发现和靶向治疗药物的出现,临床医生面对复杂多样的基因信息,可能无法有效地将基于 NGS 的循环肿瘤 DNA(ctDNA)分析纳入常规患者护理中。因此,标准化的 ctDNA 检测报告至关重要。为了保证高质量的报告性能,我们对基于 NGS 的 ctDNA 分析的当前检测和报告实践进行了调查。
我们向 66 家基因检测实验室分发了一组具有已知等位基因频率的已知变异的模拟 ctDNA 样本和相应的病例情况,以评估其检测准确性、报告完整性和信息充分性。我们使用 21 项预设标准来评估检测准确性、报告完整性和信息充分性。
目前基于 NGS 的 ctDNA 分析的报告实践远不能令人满意,尤其是在测试解释和方法细节方面。只有 42.4%的实验室报告的结果与预期结果完全一致。此外,74.2%的报告仅列出了与所研究肿瘤类型直接相关且具有明确治疗后果的异常。因此,可能会忽略那些具有实验性药物和/或药物准入计划的基因异常。此外,大多数报告中都缺少对结果进行解释的方法学细节(87.9%)。
这项初步研究表明,在正式将 ctDNA 分析应用于临床之前,还需要进一步提高准确识别变异、合理解释基因型、全面推荐潜在药物以及详细描述方法学的能力。
准确、全面和标准化的临床测序报告可以帮助将复杂的遗传信息转化为以患者为中心的临床决策,从而将精准肿瘤学纳入日常实践。然而,目前缺乏基于下一代测序(NGS)的循环肿瘤 DNA(ctDNA)分析的临床报告的标准、指南和质量要求。本研究使用一组模拟临床 ctDNA 样本和相应的病例情况,评估了当前基于 NGS 的 ctDNA 分析的临床报告实践中存在的缺陷。这里提出的建议可以作为改进 NGS 基于 ctDNA 分析在临床中应用的路线图。