Somatic genomic landscape of over 15,000 patients with advanced-stage cancer from clinical next-generation sequencing analysis of circulating tumor DNA.

2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. LBA11501-LBA11501 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver A. Zill ◽  
Stefanie Mortimer ◽  
Kimberly C. Banks ◽  
Rebecca J Nagy ◽  
Darya Chudova ◽  
...  
2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. LBA11501-LBA11501 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver A. Zill ◽  
Stefanie Mortimer ◽  
Kimberly C. Banks ◽  
Rebecca J Nagy ◽  
Darya Chudova ◽  
...  

LBA11501 Background: Next-generation sequencing (NGS) of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) enables non-invasive profiling of solid tumor cancers. Liquid biopsy studies to date have been limited to modest-size cohorts and case studies. Methods: Somatic genomic profiles of over 15,000 patients with advanced-stage clinical cancer were determined by a highly accurate, deep-coverage (15,000x) ctDNA NGS test targeting 70 genes (Guardant360). Frequencies of somatic ctDNA alterations per gene were compared to those previously described in tissue sequencing projects (e.g., TCGA). Accuracy of ctDNA sequencing (PPV) was assessed by comparing with matched tissue tests for 386 patients. Results: The cohort consisted of lung (37%), breast (14%), colorectal (10%) and other cancers (38%), with ctDNA clinical sensitivity of 86%, 83%, 85%, and 78%, respectively. Cancer-type-specific frequencies and mutual exclusivity patterns among major driver alterations largely recapitulated those seen in tissue sequencing studies. Mutation frequencies per codon correlated well between ctDNA and published tissue data, both for commonly altered tumor suppressors and for oncogenes (Pearson correlations: TP53, r = 0.94; KRAS, r = 0.99; PIK3CA, r = 0.99). The overall accuracy of ctDNA sequencing in comparison with matched tissue tests was 87% (336/386). The accuracy increased to 98% when blood and tumor were collected less than six months apart. Four distinct classes of clinical outcome benefits have been observed by liquid biopsy: 1) actionable mutations in cases with tissue QNS ( ALK fusion, or EGFR or BRAF activating mutations in lung; ERBB2 amp in gastric), 2) actionable resistance mutations at time of progression ( MET amp or EGFRT790M in lung), 3) evolution of sensitivity upon progression ( ERBB2-amplified metastatic breast cancer with triple negative primary), 4) under-genotyped tumors ( BRAFV600E or ERBB2indel in lung). Conclusions: Somatic alteration patterns in ctDNA samples largely agree with tissue alteration patterns, with the exception of resistance mutations. Clinical outcome benefits have been observed for patients treated based on ctDNA findings.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuling An ◽  
Mingming Fan ◽  
Ziyu Li ◽  
You Peng ◽  
Xiaomeng Yi ◽  
...  

Abstract We shared our successful treatment experience of a severe tetanus patient in China. A 50 year old male patient was admitted to our hospital 10 days after the right arm injury due to pain and masticatory weakness. The pathogen of wound secretion was confirmed to be clostridium tetanus by next-generation sequencing (NGS).The patient's condition rapidly progressed to a severe state with autonomic instability. After debridement and comprehensive treatment in ICU, including deep analgesia and sedation with dexmedetomidine, ventilator support and anti-infection treatment, the patient finally recovered and discharged. This case suggested that early diagnosis and reasonable intervention of severe tetanus could reduce mortality.


F1000Research ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael T. Wolfinger ◽  
Jörg Fallmann ◽  
Florian Eggenhofer ◽  
Fabian Amman

Recent achievements in next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies lead to a high demand for reuseable software components to easily compile customized analysis workflows for big genomics data. We present ViennaNGS, an integrated collection of Perl modules focused on building efficient pipelines for NGS data processing. It comes with functionality for extracting and converting features from common NGS file formats, computation and evaluation of read mapping statistics, as well as normalization of RNA abundance. Moreover, ViennaNGS provides software components for identification and characterization of splice junctions from RNA-seq data, parsing and condensing sequence motif data, automated construction of Assembly and Track Hubs for the UCSC genome browser, as well as wrapper routines for a set of commonly used NGS command line tools.


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