Monday, February 18, 2019

Feasibility and utility of a panel testing for 114 cancer-associated genes in a clinical setting: A hospital-based study. - PubMed - NCBI

Feasibility and utility of a panel testing for 114 cancer-associated genes in a clinical setting: A hospital-based study. - PubMed - NCBI



 2019 Feb 11. doi: 10.1111/cas.13969. [Epub ahead of print]

Feasibility and utility of a panel testing for 114 cancer-associated genes in a clinical setting: A hospital-based study.

Abstract

Next generation sequencing (NGS) of tumor tissue (i.e., clinical sequencing) can guide clinical management by providing information about actionable gene aberrations that have diagnostic and therapeutic significance. Here, we performed a hospital-based prospective study (TOP-GEAR project, 2nd stage) to investigate the feasibility and utility of NGS-based analysis of 114 cancer-associated genes (the NCC Oncopanel test). We examined 230 cases (comprising > 30 tumor types) of advanced solid tumors, all of which were matched with non-tumor samples. Gene profiling data were obtained for 187 cases (81.3%), 111 (59.4%) of which harbored actionable gene aberrations according to the Clinical Practice Guidelines for Next Generation Sequencing in Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment (Edition 1.0) issued by three major Japanese cancer-related societies. Twenty-five (13.3%) cases have since received molecular-targeted therapy according to their gene aberrations. These results demonstrate the utility of tumor-profiling multiplex gene panel testing in a clinical setting in Japan. This study is registered with UMIN Clinical Trials Registry (UMIN000011141). This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

KEYWORDS:

NCC Oncopanel; actionable gene aberration; clinical sequencing; gene panel test; insurance reimbursement

PMID:
 
30742731
 
DOI:
 
10.1111/cas.13969
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