High-Throughput Nucleotide Resolution Predictions of Assay Limitations Increase the Reliability and Concordance of Clinical Tests.


Journal

JCO clinical cancer informatics
ISSN: 2473-4276
Titre abrégé: JCO Clin Cancer Inform
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101708809

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
10 2021
Historique:
pubmed: 4 11 2021
medline: 30 4 2022
entrez: 3 11 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The ability of next-generation sequencing (NGS) assays to interrogate thousands of genomic loci has revolutionized genetic testing. However, translation to the clinic is impeded by false-negative results that pose a risk to patients. In response, regulatory bodies are calling for reliability measures to be reported alongside NGS results. Existing methods to estimate reliability do not account for sample- and position-specific variability, which can be significant. Here, we report an approach that computes reliability metrics for every genomic position and sample interrogated by an NGS assay. Our approach predicts the limit of detection (LOD), the lowest reliably detectable variant fraction, by taking technical factors into account. We initially explored how LOD is affected by input material amount, library conversion rate, sequencing coverage, and sequencing error rate. This revealed that LOD depends heavily on genomic context and sample properties. Using these insights, we developed a computational approach to predict LOD on the basis of a biophysical model of the NGS workflow. We focused on targeted assays for cell-free DNA, but, in principle, this approach applies to any NGS assay. We validated our approach by showing that it accurately predicts LOD and distinguishes reliable from unreliable results when screening 580 lung cancer samples for actionable mutations. Compared with a standard variant calling workflow, our approach avoided most false negatives and improved interassay concordance from 94% to 99%. Our approach, which we name LAVA (LOD-aware variant analysis), reports the LOD for every position and sample interrogated by an NGS assay. This enables reliable results to be identified and improves the transparency and safety of genetic tests.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34731027
doi: 10.1200/CCI.21.00057
doi:

Substances chimiques

Nucleotides 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1085-1095

Auteurs

Jonathan Bieler (J)

SOPHiA GENETICS SA, Saint Sulpice, Switzerland.

Christian Pozzorini (C)

SOPHiA GENETICS SA, Saint Sulpice, Switzerland.

Jessica Garcia (J)

Laboratoire de Biochimie et Biologie Moléculaire, Centre Hospitalier Lyon Sud, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Pierre Bénite, France.
Institut de Cancérologie des Hospices Civils de Lyon, CIRculating CANcer Program (CIRCAN), Lyon, France.

Alex C Tuck (AC)

SOPHiA GENETICS SA, Saint Sulpice, Switzerland.

Morgane Macheret (M)

SOPHiA GENETICS SA, Saint Sulpice, Switzerland.

Adrian Willig (A)

SOPHiA GENETICS SA, Saint Sulpice, Switzerland.

Sébastien Couraud (S)

Institut de Cancérologie des Hospices Civils de Lyon, CIRculating CANcer Program (CIRCAN), Lyon, France.
Service de Pneumologie aigue spécialisée et cancérologie thoracique, Groupement hospitalier sud, Institut de Cancérologie des Hospices Civils de Lyon, Pierre Bénite, France.

Xiaobin Xing (X)

SOPHiA GENETICS SA, Saint Sulpice, Switzerland.

Philippe Menu (P)

SOPHiA GENETICS SA, Saint Sulpice, Switzerland.

Lars M Steinmetz (LM)

Stanford Genome Technology Center, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA.
Department of Genetics, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA.

Léa Payen (L)

Laboratoire de Biochimie et Biologie Moléculaire, Centre Hospitalier Lyon Sud, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Pierre Bénite, France.
Institut de Cancérologie des Hospices Civils de Lyon, CIRculating CANcer Program (CIRCAN), Lyon, France.

Zhenyu Xu (Z)

SOPHiA GENETICS SA, Saint Sulpice, Switzerland.

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Classifications MeSH