scholarly journals Molecular Testing on Cytology for Gene Fusion Detection

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernando Schmitt ◽  
Alessia Di Lorito ◽  
Philippe Vielh

Cytology samples are suitable for the study of genotypic and phenotypic changes observed in different tumors. Being a minimally invasive technique, cytology sampling has been used as an acceptable alternative to track the alterations associated with tumor progression. Although the detection of gene mutations is well-established on cytology, in the last few years, gene fusion detections are becoming mandatory, especially in some tumor types such as lung cancer. Different technologies are available such as immunocytochemistry, fluorescence in situ hybridization, reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, and massive parallel sequencing approaches. Considering that many new drugs targeted fusion proteins, cytological samples can be of use to detect gene fusions in solid and lymphoproliferative tumor patients. In this article, we revised the use of several techniques utilized to check gene fusions in cytological material.

2011 ◽  
Vol 135 (5) ◽  
pp. 602-609 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer L. Hunt

Abstract Context.—Molecular testing in anatomic pathology is becoming standardized and can contribute valuable diagnostic, therapeutic, and prognostic information for the clinical management of patients. In head and neck pathology, recent advances in molecular testing have provided important targets in several different diagnostic areas, with particular emerging clinical applications in squamous and salivary gland pathology. In squamous mucosal-derived lesions, human papilloma virus has emerged as an important pathogenic etiology in a subset of oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas. Within the category of salivary gland tumors, 3 tumors have recently been recognized that contain oncogenic translocations. Objective.—To describe the current state of information about the molecular alterations in squamous lesions and in salivary gland tumors of the head and neck. Data Sources.—Published literature on squamous and salivary gland tumors of the head and neck. Conclusions.—The different approaches to identification of viral-associated tumors include assays using polymerase chain reaction, in situ hybridization, and immunohistochemistry. Most mucoepidermoid carcinomas harbor MECT1-MAML2 gene rearrangement. The MYB-NFIB translocations have recently been identified in adenoid cystic carcinomas. Finally, a newly described tumor of salivary gland, mammary analogue secretory carcinoma, harbors the ETV6-NTRK3 translocation. Although these translocations are just emerging as diagnostic targets, future roles may evolve as potential therapeutic targets.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Kong ◽  
Rong Bu ◽  
Sandeep Kumar Parvathareddy ◽  
Abdul K Siraj ◽  
Nabil Siraj ◽  
...  

Objective: Fusions involving neurotrophic tyrosine receptor kinase (NTRK) are known oncogenic drivers in a broad range of tumor types. It recently gained attention as predictor of targeted therapy since selective NTRK inhibitors are now approved in US and Europe for patients with solid tumors harboring gene fusions. However, estimation of NTRK gene fusion/alteration frequency and its clinico-pathological characteristics in papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is limited, especially in a population with high incidence for PTC like Middle Eastern population. This study aims to characterize the NTRK gene fusion frequency and investigate the utility of pan-Trk immunohistochemistry (IHC) as predictor of NTRK fusion in a large cohort of Middle Eastern PTC. Methods: FISH analysis for NTRK gene fusions and pan-Trk IHC was performed on 315 Middle Eastern PTCs. Correlation of NTRK gene fusion and protein expression with clinico-pathological markers and patient outcome were determined. Results: In our cohort, 6.0% (19/315) patients showed NTRK gene fusions and were significantly associated with pediatric PTC (p = 0.0143), lymph node metastasis (p = 0.0428) and BRAF wild-type tumors (p < 0.0001). Pan-Trk IHC was positive in 9.2% (29/315) of cases and significantly associated with NTRK fusions, with a sensitivity of 73.7% and specificity of 94.9% in this cohort. Conclusions: This study confirms the presence of NTRK fusions in Middle Eastern PTC which is significantly enriched in BRAF wild-type as well as pediatric age group and proposes the usefulness of IHC to screen for PTC patients with NTRK fusion that might benefit from TRK inhibitors.


2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 521-521 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Pishvaian ◽  
Christian Diego Rolfo ◽  
Stephen V. Liu ◽  
Pratik S. Multani ◽  
Edna Chow Maneval ◽  
...  

521 Background: Despite recent improvements in chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer that have demonstrated improvements in survival, response rates remain at less than 50%. Distinct molecular subgroups of pancreatic cancer that harbor specific actionable molecular alterations have recently been identified. These include gene fusions of the receptor tyrosine kinases NTRK and ROS1. Entrectinib is a CNS-active, potent, and selective TRK and ROS1 inhibitor that has shown substantial clinical activity in patients with locally advanced or metastatic solid tumors that have NTRK or ROS1 fusions (Drilon A, et al. Cancer Discov. 2017;7[4]:400-409). Methods: We examined 3 cases of pancreatic cancer where an actionable gene rearrangement was identified: 2 with a TPR-NTRK gene fusion, and 1 with an SCL4-ROS1 gene fusion. All 3 patients were treated with entrectinib 600 mg daily in a phase 2 trial (NCT02568267). Results: Entrectinib was well tolerated with mostly grade 1-2 adverse events consisting primarily of arthralgias, myalgias, and fatigue. All 3 patients showed evidence of clinical improvement, with normalization of the tumor biomarker CA19-9 and confirmed partial responses as per RECIST v1.1 in the 2 patients with a TPR-NTRK fusion, 1 of which was associated with a significant decrease in metabolic activity as assessed by PET/CT scan. The patient with the SCL4-ROS1 fusion had stable disease for at least 6 months. All 3 patients had an improvement to, or maintenance of, a high quality of life while on study. At the time of data cutoff, 1 of the patients with a TPR-NTRK fusion remained on treatment > 1 year. Conclusions: Entrectinib treatment was associated with response and prolonged disease control in these 3 patients with NTRK or ROS1 fusion-positive pancreatic cancer. NTRK and ROS1 gene fusions are rare in pancreatic cancer. The true incidence is unknown, as routine testing for gene fusions in pancreatic cancer is not yet standard practice. Given the benefit seen here with entrectinib and the clinical need for improved therapeutics, there may be value in broader and earlier molecular testing of patients with pancreatic cancer for these actionable fusions. Clinical trial information: NCT02568267.


2006 ◽  
Vol 130 (8) ◽  
pp. 1199-1207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Lazar ◽  
Lynne V. Abruzzo ◽  
Raphael E. Pollock ◽  
Sangkyou Lee ◽  
Bogdan Czerniak

Abstract Context.—Sarcomas are rare, numerous in type, and often difficult to definitively classify. Work in the last 2 decades has revealed that a significant subset of sarcomas are associated with specific chromosomal translocations producing chimeric (fusion) genes that play a role in the sarcomas' biology and are helpful in their differential diagnosis. Objective.—To briefly review the sarcomas associated with specific translocations presenting Ewing sarcoma and synovial sarcoma as archetypes and to further explain how cytogenetic and molecular biologic approaches are being used in the diagnosis of sarcomas. Data Sources.—This work is based on a selected review of the relevant medical and scientific literature and our extensive experience with molecular testing in sarcomas. Conclusions.—In addition to, and complementing, the traditional diagnostic methods of examination of hematoxylin-eosin stained slides, immunohistochemistry, and sound clinical-pathologic correlation, additional cytogenetic and molecular biologic methods are being increasingly utilized and relied on in sarcoma pathology. These methods include chromosomal karyotyping, fluorescence in-situ hybridization, spectral karyotyping, and polymerase chain reaction– based methods for demonstrating specific chromosomal translocations and fusion genes. Understanding the basis of these methods and their application is critical to better provide accurate and validated specific diagnoses of sarcomas.


BMC Genomics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (S11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Qian Liu ◽  
Yu Hu ◽  
Andres Stucky ◽  
Li Fang ◽  
Jiang F. Zhong ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Long-read RNA-Seq techniques can generate reads that encompass a large proportion or the entire mRNA/cDNA molecules, so they are expected to address inherited limitations of short-read RNA-Seq techniques that typically generate < 150 bp reads. However, there is a general lack of software tools for gene fusion detection from long-read RNA-seq data, which takes into account the high basecalling error rates and the presence of alignment errors. Results In this study, we developed a fast computational tool, LongGF, to efficiently detect candidate gene fusions from long-read RNA-seq data, including cDNA sequencing data and direct mRNA sequencing data. We evaluated LongGF on tens of simulated long-read RNA-seq datasets, and demonstrated its superior performance in gene fusion detection. We also tested LongGF on a Nanopore direct mRNA sequencing dataset and a PacBio sequencing dataset generated on a mixture of 10 cancer cell lines, and found that LongGF achieved better performance to detect known gene fusions over existing computational tools. Furthermore, we tested LongGF on a Nanopore cDNA sequencing dataset on acute myeloid leukemia, and pinpointed the exact location of a translocation (previously known in cytogenetic resolution) in base resolution, which was further validated by Sanger sequencing. Conclusions In summary, LongGF will greatly facilitate the discovery of candidate gene fusion events from long-read RNA-Seq data, especially in cancer samples. LongGF is implemented in C++ and is available at https://github.com/WGLab/LongGF.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1898-1898
Author(s):  
Steven M. Foltz ◽  
Qingsong Gao ◽  
Christopher J. Yoon ◽  
Amila Weerasinghe ◽  
Hua Sun ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Gene fusions are the result of genomic rearrangements that create hybrid protein products or bring the regulatory elements of one gene into close proximity of another. Fusions often dysregulate gene function or expression through oncogene overexpression or tumor suppressor underexpression (Gao, Liang, Foltz, et al. Cell Rep 2018). Some fusions such as EML4--ALK in lung adenocarcinoma are known druggable targets. Fusion detection algorithms utilize discordantly mapped RNA-seq reads. Careful consideration of detection and filtering procedures is vital for large-scale fusion detection because current methods are prone to reporting false positives and show poor concordance. Multiple myeloma (MM) is a blood cancer in which rapidly expanding clones of plasma cells spread in the bone marrow. Translocations that juxtapose the highly-expressed IGH enhancer with potential oncogenes are associated with overexpression of partner genes, although they may not lead to a detectable gene fusion in RNA-seq data. Previous studies have explored the fusion landscape of multiple myeloma cohorts (Cleynen, et al. Nat Comm 2017; Nasser, et al. Blood 2017). In this study, we developed a novel gene fusion detection pipeline and post-processing strategy to analyze 742 patient samples at the primary time point and 64 samples at follow-up time points (806 total samples) from the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF) CoMMpass Study using RNA-seq, WGS, and clinical data. Methods and Results: We overlapped five fusion detection algorithms (EricScript, FusionCatcher, INTEGRATE, PRADA, and STAR-Fusion) to report fusion events. Our filtered call set consisted of 2,817 fusions with a median of 3 fusions per sample (mean 3.8), similar to glioblastoma, breast, ovarian, and prostate cancers in TCGA. Major recurrent fusions involving immunoglobulin genes included IGH--WHSC1 (88 primary samples), IGL--BMI1 (29), and the upstream neighbor of MYC, PVT1, paired with IGH (6), IGK (3), and IGL (11). For each event, we used WGS data when available to determine if there was genomic support of the gene fusion (based on discordant WGS reads, SV event detection, and MMRF CoMMpass Seq-FISH WGS results) (Miller, et al. Blood 2016). WGS validation rates varied by the level of RNA-seq evidence supporting each fusion, with an overall rate of 24.1%, which is comparable to previously observed pan-cancer validation rates using low-pass WGS. We calculated the association between fusion status and gene expression and identified genes such as BCL2L11, CCND1/2, LTBR, and TXNDC5 that showed significant overexpression (t-test). We explored the clinical connections of fusion events through survival analysis and clinical data correlations, and by mining potentially druggable targets from our Database of Evidence for Precision Oncology (dinglab.wustl.edu/depo) (Sun, Mashl, Sengupta, et al. Bioinformatics 2018). Major examples of upregulated fusion kinases that could potentially be targeted with off-label drug use include FGFR3 and NTRK1. We examined the evolution of fusion events over multiple time points. In one MMRF patient with a t(8;14) translocation joining the IGH locus and transcription factor MAFA, we observed IGH fusions with TOP1MT (neighbor of MAFA) at all four time points with corresponding high expression of TOP1MT and MAFA. Using non-MMRF single-cell RNA data from different patients, we were able to track cell-type composition over time as well as detect subpopulations of cells harboring fusions at different time points with potential treatment implications. Discussion: Gene fusions offer potential targets for alternative MM therapies. Careful implementation of gene fusion detection algorithms and post-processing are essential in large cohort studies to reduce false positives and enrich results for clinically relevant information. Clinical fusion detection from untargeted RNA-seq remains a challenge due to poor sensitivity, specificity, and usability. By combining MMRF CoMMpass data from multiple platforms, we have produced a comprehensive fusion profile of 742 MM patients. We have shown novel gene fusion associations with gene expression and clinical data, and we identified candidates for druggability studies. Disclosures Vij: Bristol-Myers Squibb: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Celgene: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Jazz Pharmaceuticals: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Jansson: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Amgen: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Karyopharma: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Takeda: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding.


Author(s):  
Esther Conde ◽  
Susana Hernandez ◽  
Elena Sanchez ◽  
Rita Maria Regojo ◽  
Carmen Camacho ◽  
...  

Context.— Food and Drug Administration–approved TRK inhibitors with impressive overall response rates are now available for patients with multiple cancer types that harbor NTRK rearrangements, yet the identification of NTRK fusions remains a difficult challenge. These alterations are highly recurrent in extremely rare malignancies or can be detected in exceedingly small subsets of common tumor types. A 2-step approach has been proposed, involving a screening by immunohistochemistry (IHC) followed by a confirmatory method (fluorescence in situ hybridization, reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction, or next-generation sequencing) in cases expressing the protein. However, there is no interpretation guide for any of the available IHC clones. Objective.— To provide a pragmatic update on the use of pan-TRK IHC. Selected examples of the different IHC staining patterns across multiple histologies are shown. Data Sources.— Primary literature review with PubMed, combined with personal diagnostic and research experience. Conclusions.— In-depth knowledge of pan-TRK IHC will help pathologists implement a rational approach to the detection of NTRK fusions in human malignancies.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhichao Liu ◽  
Xi Chen ◽  
Ruth Roberts ◽  
Ruili Huang ◽  
Mike Mikailov ◽  
...  

High-risk neuroblastoma (NB) remains a significant therapeutic challenge facing current pediatric oncology patients. Structural variants such as gene fusions have shown an initial promise in enhancing mechanistic understanding of NB and improving survival rates. In this study, we performed a comprehensive in silico investigation on the translational ability of gene fusions for patient stratification and treatment development for high-risk NB patients. Specifically, three state-of-the-art gene fusion detection algorithms, including ChimeraScan, SOAPfuse, and TopHat-Fusion, were employed to identify the fusion transcripts in a RNA-seq data set of 498 neuroblastoma patients. Then, the 176 high-risk patients were further stratified into four different subgroups based on gene fusion profiles. Furthermore, Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was performed, and differentially expressed genes (DEGs) for the redefined high-risk group were extracted and functionally analyzed. Finally, repositioning candidates were enriched in each patient subgroup with drug transcriptomic profiles from the LINCS L1000 Connectivity Map. We found the number of identified gene fusions was increased from clinical the low-risk stage to the high-risk stage. Although the technical concordance of fusion detection algorithms was suboptimal, they have a similar biological relevance concerning perturbed pathways and regulated DEGs. The gene fusion profiles could be utilized to redefine high-risk patient subgroups with significant onset age of NB, which yielded the improved survival curves (Log-rank p value ≤ 0.05). Out of 48 enriched repositioning candidates, 45 (93.8%) have antitumor potency, and 24 (50%) were confirmed with either on-going clinical trials or literature reports. The gene fusion profiles have a discrimination power for redefining patient subgroups in high-risk NB and facilitate precision medicine-based drug repositioning implementation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jagadheshwar Balan ◽  
Garrett Jenkinson ◽  
Asha Nair ◽  
Neiladri Saha ◽  
Tejaswi Koganti ◽  
...  

Detecting gene fusions involving driver oncogenes is pivotal in clinical diagnosis and treatment of cancer patients. Recent developments in next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies have enabled improved assays for bioinformatics-based gene fusions detection. In clinical applications, where a small number of fusions are clinically actionable, targeted polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based NGS chemistries, such as the QIAseq RNAscan assay, aim to improve accuracy compared to standard RNA sequencing. Existing informatics methods for gene fusion detection in NGS-based RNA sequencing assays traditionally use a transcriptome-based spliced alignment approach or a de-novo assembly approach. Transcriptome-based spliced alignment methods face challenges with short read mapping yielding low quality alignments. De-novo assembly-based methods yield longer contigs from short reads that can be more sensitive for genomic rearrangements, but face performance and scalability challenges. Consequently, there exists a need for a method to efficiently and accurately detect fusions in targeted PCR-based NGS chemistries. We describe SeekFusion, a highly accurate and computationally efficient pipeline enabling identification of gene fusions from PCR-based NGS chemistries. Utilizing biological samples processed with the QIAseq RNAscan assay and in-silico simulated data we demonstrate that SeekFusion gene fusion detection accuracy outperforms popular existing methods such as STAR-Fusion, TOPHAT-Fusion and JAFFA-hybrid. We also present results from 4,484 patient samples tested for neurological tumors and sarcoma, encompassing details on some novel fusions identified.


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