External Quality Assessment on Molecular Tumor Profiling with Circulating Tumor DNA-Based Methodologies Routinely Used in Clinical Pathology within the COIN Consortium

BACKGROUND: Identification of tumor-derived variants in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) has potential as a sensitive and reliable surrogate for tumor tissue-based routine diagnostic testing. However, variations in pre(analytical) procedures affect the efficiency of ctDNA recovery. Here, an external quality assessment (EQA) was performed to determine the performance of ctDNA mutation detection work flows that are used in current diagnostic settings across laboratories within the Dutch COIN consortium (ctDNA on the road to implementation in The Netherlands). METHODS: Aliquots of 3 high-volume diag... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van der Leest, Paul
Rozendal, Pim
Hinrichs, John
van Noesel, Carel J M
Zwaenepoel, Karen
Deiman, Birgit
Huijsmans, Cornelis J J
van Eijk, Ronald
Speel, Ernst Jan M
van Haastert, Rick J
Ligtenberg, Marjolijn J L
van Schaik, Ron H N
Jansen, Maurice P H M
Dubbink, Hendrikus J
de Leng, Wendy W
Leers, Mathie P G
Tamminga, Menno
van den Broek, Daan
van Kempen, Léon C
Schuuring, Ed
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2024
Reihe/Periodikum: van der Leest , P , Rozendal , P , Hinrichs , J , van Noesel , C J M , Zwaenepoel , K , Deiman , B , Huijsmans , C J J , van Eijk , R , Speel , E J M , van Haastert , R J , Ligtenberg , M J L , van Schaik , R H N , Jansen , M P H M , Dubbink , H J , de Leng , W W , Leers , M P G , Tamminga , M , van den Broek , D , van Kempen , L C & Schuuring , E 2024 , ' External Quality Assessment on Molecular Tumor Profiling with Circulating Tumor DNA-Based Methodologies Routinely Used in Clinical Pathology within the COIN Consortium ' , Clinical chemistry , vol. 70 , no. 5 , pp. 759-767 . https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/hvae014
Schlagwörter: Humans / Circulating Tumor DNA/blood / Mutation / Neoplasms/genetics / Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras)/genetics / ErbB Receptors/genetics / Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf/genetics / Netherlands
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29608724
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/11370/a174bbbb-2574-4fab-b25f-ad1a12929fc2

BACKGROUND: Identification of tumor-derived variants in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) has potential as a sensitive and reliable surrogate for tumor tissue-based routine diagnostic testing. However, variations in pre(analytical) procedures affect the efficiency of ctDNA recovery. Here, an external quality assessment (EQA) was performed to determine the performance of ctDNA mutation detection work flows that are used in current diagnostic settings across laboratories within the Dutch COIN consortium (ctDNA on the road to implementation in The Netherlands). METHODS: Aliquots of 3 high-volume diagnostic leukapheresis (DLA) plasma samples and 3 artificial reference plasma samples with predetermined mutations were distributed among 16 Dutch laboratories. Participating laboratories were requested to perform ctDNA analysis for BRAF exon 15, EGFR exon 18-21, and KRAS exon 2-3 using their regular circulating cell-free DNA (ccfDNA) analysis work flow. Laboratories were assessed based on adherence to the study protocol, overall detection rate, and overall genotyping performance. RESULTS: A broad range of preanalytical conditions (e.g., plasma volume, elution volume, and extraction methods) and analytical methodologies (e.g., droplet digital PCR [ddPCR], small-panel PCR assays, and next-generation sequencing [NGS]) were used. Six laboratories (38%) had a performance score of >0.90; all other laboratories scored between 0.26 and 0.80. Although 13 laboratories (81%) reached a 100% overall detection rate, the therapeutically relevant EGFR p.(S752_I759del) (69%), EGFR p.(N771_H773dup) (50%), and KRAS p.(G12C) (48%) mutations were frequently not genotyped accurately. CONCLUSIONS: Divergent (pre)analytical protocols could lead to discrepant clinical outcomes when using the same plasma samples. Standardization of (pre)analytical work flows can facilitate the implementation of reproducible liquid biopsy testing in the clinical routine.