Abstract

BackgroundDetection of somatic mutations is a mandatory practice for therapeutic definition in precision oncology. However, somatic mutation detection protocols use DNA from formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tumor tissues, which can result in detection of nonreproducible sequence artifacts, especially C:G > T:A transitions, in DNA. In recent studies, DNA pretreatment with uracil DNA glycosylase (UDG), an enzyme involved in base excision repair, significantly reduced the number of DNA artifacts after mutation detection by next-generation sequencing (NGS) and other methods, without affecting the capacity to detect real mutations. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of UDG enzymatic pretreatment in reducing the number of DNA sequencing artifacts from FFPE tumor samples, to improve the accuracy of genetic testing in the molecular diagnostic routine.MethodsWe selected 12 FFPE tumor samples (10 melanoma, 1 lung, and 1 colorectal tumor sample) with different storage times. We compared sequencing results of a 16-hotspot gene panel of NGS libraries prepared with UDG-treated and untreated samples.ResultsAll UDG-treated samples showed large reductions in the total number of transitions (medium reduction of 80%) and the transition/transversion ratio (medium reduction of 75%). In addition, most sequence artifacts presented a low variant allele frequency (VAF < 10%) which are eliminated with UDG treatment.ConclusionIncluding UDG enzymatic treatment before multiplex amplification in the NGS workflow significantly decreased the number of artifactual variants detected in FFPE samples. Thus, including this additional step in the current methodology should improve the rate of true mutation detection in the molecular diagnostic routine.

Highlights

  • Detection of somatic mutations is a mandatory practice for therapeutic definition in precision oncology

  • We performed next-generation sequencing (NGS) sequencing of a 16-gene panel using uracil DNA glycosylase (UDG)-treated and untreated DNA obtained from 12 formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tumors samples previously known to harbor high levels of transitions in routine mutation analysis, to evaluate the capacity of reducing sequencing artifacts with UDG treatment

  • We evaluated the effects of UDG enzymatic pretreatment in reducing sequencing artifacts of DNA from FFPE tumor samples, to improve genetic testing used in the molecular diagnostic routine

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Summary

Introduction

Detection of somatic mutations is a mandatory practice for therapeutic definition in precision oncology. Somatic mutation detection protocols use DNA from formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tumor tissues, which can result in detection of nonreproducible sequence artifacts, especially C:G > T:A transitions, in DNA. DNA from formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tumor tissues is frequently used when detecting somatic mutations in defining the tumor profile and (2019) 39:7 selecting the proper target therapy in cancer treatment [5]. Such DNA presents extensive DNA degradation, which reduces the efficiency of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of DNA templates for further sequencing. DNA from FFPE samples presents sequence artifacts that may interfere with detection of true gene mutations and increase the possibility of falsepositive mutation calls [6, 7]

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