Abstract

BackgroundAlthough microsatellite instability (MSI) is most commonly detected in colorectal cancer (CRC), improvement in MSI analysis method can always help us better assessing MSI phenotypes and gaining useful information in challenging cases. The purpose of current study is to explore whether the ProDx® MSI analysis System (ProDx® MSI) can improve MSI classification in CRC.MethodsWe compared the MSI profiles of 97 FFPE samples from CRC patients by ProDx® MSI with Promega MSI analysis System 1.2 and NCI panel. The result is then confirmed by IHC test, which evaluate MMR protein expression. Furthermore, next generation sequencing was performed to double confirm the specimens with discordant results.ResultsAmong the total 97 CRC cases, 35 were scored as MSI-High by ProDx® MSI, Promega MSI analysis System 1.2, and NCI panel simultaneously. Three extra MSI-High cases were identified by ProDx® MSI. These three cases were classified as MSI-Low by NCI panel, while two of these as MSI-Low, and 1 as MSS by Promega MSI analysis System 1.2. ProDx® MSI had higher concordance with IHC detection compared with Promega MSI Analysis System 1.2 and NCI panel at 99.0%, 96.9%, and 95.9%, respectively. The ProDx® MSI distinguished MSI status with 100% sensitivity and 98.4% specificity. Our data showed that MSI-High phenotype occurred most frequently in tumor development stage I and stage II.ConclusionsThe colorectal cancer can be classified according to MSI status accurately by ProDx® MSI. More cases with MSI-High feature may be revealed by ProDx® MSI than by previous test systems in colorectal cancer.

Highlights

  • Microsatellite instability (MSI), identified by changes in the length of short tandem repeats of microsatellite markers in tumor DNA, is caused by an impaired DNA mismatch repair (MMR) system that fails to repair DNA replication error during tumor development [1]

  • 5–10 ng of purified DNA was used for microsatellite instability (MSI) analysis with three different microsatellite testing panels: (1) ProDx® MSI containing eight mononucleotide repeat markers with four new long mononucleotide repeats (BAT-52, BAT-56, BAT-59 and BAT-60) and four traditional markers (NR21, BAT-25, BAT-26, and MONO-27) and two additional pentanucleotide repeats Penta C and Penta D for sample identification (Shanghai Promega), (2) MSI 1.2 (Shanghai Promega) containing five traditional mononucleitide repeats BAT-25, BAT-26, NR-21, NR-24, and MONO-27 and two pentanucleotide repeats Penta C and Penta D for specimen identification (Promega, Madison), (3) the National Cancer Institute (NCI) panel (

  • MMR gene mutations were further analyzed by next generation sequencing (NGS) for case 50N/T with MSI-H feature identified by 3 methods of MSI assays but with intact MMR protein IHC staining, as well as cases of 46N/T, 67N/T, 138N/T, 165N/T, 75N/T, 132N/T and 55N/T which with MSI-L feature tested by ProDx® MSI but with microsatellite stable (MSS) phenotype detected by MSI NCI panel and MSI 1.2

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Summary

Introduction

Microsatellite instability (MSI), identified by changes in the length of short tandem repeats of microsatellite markers in tumor DNA, is caused by an impaired DNA mismatch repair (MMR) system that fails to repair DNA replication error during tumor development [1]. Microsatellite instability (MSI) is most commonly detected in colorectal cancer (CRC), improvement in MSI analysis method can always help us better assessing MSI phenotypes and gaining useful information in challenging cases. Methods We compared the MSI profiles of 97 FFPE samples from CRC patients by ProDx® MSI with Promega MSI analysis System 1.2 and NCI panel. Results Among the total 97 CRC cases, 35 were scored as MSI-High by ProDx® MSI, Promega MSI analysis System 1.2, and NCI panel simultaneously. Three extra MSI-High cases were identified by ProDx® MSI These three cases were classified as MSI-Low by NCI panel, while two of these as MSI-Low, and 1 as MSS by Promega MSI analysis System 1.2. ProDx® MSI had higher concordance with IHC detection compared with Promega MSI Analysis System 1.2 and NCI panel at 99.0%, 96.9%, and 95.9%, respectively. More cases with MSI-High feature may be revealed by ProDx® MSI than by previous test systems in colorectal cancer

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