Abstract 210P
Background
Rare tumor-specific mutations in patient samples serve as excellent markers to monitor the course of malignant disease and responses to therapy in clinical routine, and improved assay techniques are needed for broad adoption. We describe herein - superRCA assays - which provides for rapid and highly specific detection of DNA sequence variants present at very low frequencies in DNA samples. Using a standard flow cytometer we demonstrate precise, ultra-sensitive detection of single-nucleotide mutant sequences from malignant cells against a 100,000-fold excess of DNA, to follow the course of patients treated for acute myeloid leukemia (AML).
Methods
Sequence of interest are first enriched by targeted PCR amplification from a patient sample The amplified sequences are next converted to DNA circles that are subjected to rolling-circle amplification (RCA). Padlock probes specific for mutant or wild-type sequences are then used to probe the repeated sequences of the RCA products with exquisite specificity, followed by RCA of the circularized probes. The large DNA clusters that result from each starting DNA circle are referred to as superRCA products.
Results
With the spike-in samples, we have succcessfully demonstrated that superRCA assay can reliably detect IDH mutation at 1 in 100,000 levels, as comparison, the ddPCR assays sensitivity was limited at 1 in 1000 levels due to high false positive event rate and high standard deviations. In 3 longitudinal AML patient studies, these patients were initially high with IDH mutations at the diagnosis of AML, then after the stem cell transplantation treatment, the mutation levels was decreased to undetectable levels both with superRCA and ddPCR assay. But with superRCA assay, we were able to detect IDH mutation at 1 in 10,000 before the patient were fall complete remission, while with ddPCR assay it was impossible to detect such intermediate conditions for the patient due to the limited sensitivity of ddPCR assay.
Conclusions
The superRCA assay procedure is suitable for routine use by virtue of its high sensitivity and simplicity. The 3-hr protocol only requires a sequence of five additions to a DNA sample, separated by incubations, before reaction products are analyzed using a standard flow cytometer.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
The research was funded by The Swedish Research Council, the European Research Council under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP/2007-2013) / ERC Grant Agreement n. 294409 (ProteinSeq), IngaBritt och Arne Lundbergs Forskningsstiftelse, Vinnova Medtech4Healthmedtech4health-collaborative projects for improved health (2019-01464), The Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SB16-0046), Torsten Söderbergs Stiftelse (M130/16) and The Swedish Cancer Society (19 0384 Pj).
Disclosure
L. Chen: Financial Interests, Institutional, Officer: Rarity Bioscience AB. U. Landegren: Financial Interests, Institutional, Ownership Interest: Navinci AB. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
247TiP - Addition of induction, concurrent and maintenance durvalumab to induction and concurrent chemoradiation vs induction and concurrent chemoradiation for previously untreated locoregionally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma: A phase II randomised-controlled trial
Presenter: Victor Lee
Session: Poster viewing 03
248P - The use of complementary medicine in Chinese pediatric patients receiving palliative care: A multi-centre study
Presenter: Chun SIng Lam
Session: Poster viewing 03
249P - Improving quality of life and symptom burden with opioids and adjuncts in lung cancer (IQSOL study)
Presenter: Naren Gokulanathan
Session: Poster viewing 03
250P - An analysis of nutritional and psychological status of patients with advanced cancer
Presenter: Shasha Wang
Session: Poster viewing 03
251P - Is QUAD SHOT palliative cyclical hypo-fractionated radiotherapy in advanced head and neck cancer the way to go? An alternative regimen in low resource countries
Presenter: Ravi Kanodia
Session: Poster viewing 03
252P - Preferred place of death among terminally ill cancer patients: A single centre observational study from India
Presenter: Suhana Sulfiker
Session: Poster viewing 03
253P - Hemostatic radiotherapy for gastric cancer: MRI as an alternative to endoscopy for post-treatment evaluation
Presenter: Osamu Tanaka
Session: Poster viewing 03
254P - Sexual function of cervical cancer survivors: A single center prospective study
Presenter: Dinesh Ravikumar
Session: Poster viewing 03
255P - Volunteers’ role to provide quality palliative care for terminal cancer
Presenter: SAPTAPARNA JANA
Session: Poster viewing 03