Technological considerations for genome-guided diagnosis and management of cancer.

Genome Med
Authors
Abstract

Technological, methodological, and analytical advances continue to improve the resolution of our view into the cancer genome, even as we discover ways to carry out analyses at greater distances from the primary tumor sites. These advances are finally making the integration of cancer genomic profiling into clinical practice feasible. Formalin fixation and paraffin embedding, which has long been the default pathological biopsy medium, is now being supplemented with liquid biopsy as a means to profile the cancer genomes of patients. At each stage of the genomic data generation process-sample collection, preservation, storage, extraction, library construction, sequencing, and variant calling-there are variables that impact the sensitivity and specificity of the analytical result and the clinical utility of the test. These variables include sample degradation, low yields of nucleic acid, and low variant allele fractions (proportions of assayed molecules carrying variant allele(s)). We review here the most common pre-analytical and analytical factors relating to routine cancer patient genome profiling, some solutions to common challenges, and the major sample preparation and sequencing technology choices available today.

Year of Publication
2016
Journal
Genome Med
Volume
8
Issue
1
Pages
112
Date Published
2016 Oct 26
ISSN
1756-994X
DOI
10.1186/s13073-016-0370-4
PubMed ID
27784341
PubMed Central ID
PMC5080740
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