Abstract

Microsatellite instability (MSI) is present in 15–20% of primary colorectal cancers. MSI status is assessed to detect Lynch syndrome, guide adjuvant chemotherapy, determine prognosis, and use as a companion test for checkpoint blockade inhibitors. Traditionally, MSI status is determined by immunohistochemistry or molecular methods. The Idylla™ MSI Assay is a fully automated molecular method (including automated result interpretation), using seven novel MSI biomarkers (ACVR2A, BTBD7, DIDO1, MRE11, RYR3, SEC31A, SULF2) and not requiring matched normal tissue. In this real-world global study, 44 clinical centers performed Idylla™ testing on a total of 1301 archived colorectal cancer formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue sections and compared Idylla™ results against available results from routine diagnostic testing in those sites. MSI mutations detected with the Idylla™ MSI Assay were equally distributed over the seven biomarkers, and 84.48% of the MSI-high samples had ≥ 5 mutated biomarkers, while 98.25% of the microsatellite-stable samples had zero mutated biomarkers. The concordance level between the Idylla™ MSI Assay and immunohistochemistry was 96.39% (988/1025); 17/37 discordant samples were found to be concordant when a third method was used. Compared with routine molecular methods, the concordance level was 98.01% (789/805); third-method analysis found concordance for 8/16 discordant samples. The failure rate of the Idylla™ MSI Assay (0.23%; 3/1301) was lower than that of referenced immunohistochemistry (4.37%; 47/1075) or molecular assays (0.86%; 7/812). In conclusion, lower failure rates and high concordance levels were found between the Idylla™ MSI Assay and routine tests.

Highlights

  • Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a serious health problem in western countries

  • The current study describes a multi-center evaluation (44 centers) of the performance of the IdyllaTM Microsatellite instability (MSI) assay in comparison with IHC or with molecular tests including the Bethesda/Promega MSI Analysis System on 1301 archival CRC FFPE tissue sections

  • The MSI status of archived clinical FFPE tissue sections originating from 1301 patients with CRC was determined using the IdyllaTM MSI assay at 44 centers

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Summary

Introduction

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a serious health problem in western countries. In 2018 in Europe, CRC was the second most commonly diagnosed malignancy (500,000 cases) and the second leading cause of cancer death (243,000 deaths), with a total of 4.51 million new cancer cases overall [1, 2]. The general population has a lifetime risk for developing CRC of about 5% [3, 4]. Environmental and hereditary factors contribute to its development, as demonstrated by the accumulation of mutations in oncogenes, tumor suppression, and mismatch repair deficiency. CRCs comprise a group of molecularly heterogeneous tumors that are characterized by a range of genomic and epigenomic alterations. A significant proportion of colorectal carcinomas show chromosomal instability and follow the classical morphological progression sequence in the adenoma/ carcinoma pathway genes [5, 6]

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