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Advanced molecular pathology for rare tumours: A national feasibility study and model for centralised medulloblastoma diagnostics.

Authors :
Crosier S
Hicks D
Schwalbe EC
Williamson D
Leigh Nicholson S
Smith A
Lindsey JC
Michalski A
Pizer B
Bailey S
Bown N
Cuthbert G
Wharton SB
Jacques TS
Joshi A
Clifford SC
Source :
Neuropathology and applied neurobiology [Neuropathol Appl Neurobiol] 2021 Oct; Vol. 47 (6), pp. 736-747. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 May 02.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Aims: Application of advanced molecular pathology in rare tumours is hindered by low sample numbers, access to specialised expertise/technologies and tissue/assay QC and rapid reporting requirements. We assessed the feasibility of co-ordinated real-time centralised pathology review (CPR), encompassing molecular diagnostics and contemporary genomics (RNA-seq/DNA methylation-array).<br />Methods: This nationwide trial in medulloblastoma (<80 UK diagnoses/year) introduced a national reference centre (NRC) and assessed its performance and reporting to World Health Organisation standards. Paired frozen/formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumour material were co-submitted from 135 patients (16 referral centres).<br />Results: Complete CPR diagnostics were successful for 88% (120/135). Inadequate sampling was the most common cause of failure; biomaterials were typically suitable for methylation-array (129/135, 94%), but frozen tissues commonly fell below RNA-seq QC requirements (53/135, 39%). Late reporting was most often due to delayed submission. CPR assigned or altered histological variant (vs local diagnosis) for 40/135 tumours (30%). Benchmarking/QC of specific biomarker assays impacted test results; fluorescent in-situ hybridisation most accurately identified high-risk MYC/MYCN amplification (20/135, 15%), while combined methods (CTNNB1/chr6 status, methylation-array subgrouping) best defined favourable-risk WNT tumours (14/135; 10%). Engagement of a specialist pathologist panel was essential for consensus assessment of histological variants and immunohistochemistry. Overall, CPR altered clinical risk-status for 29% of patients.<br />Conclusion: National real-time CPR is feasible, delivering robust diagnostics to WHO criteria and assignment of clinical risk-status, significantly altering clinical management. Recommendations and experience from our study are applicable to advanced molecular diagnostics systems, both local and centralised, across rare tumour types, enabling their application in biomarker-driven routine diagnostics and clinical/research studies.<br /> (© 2021 The Authors. Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Neuropathological Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1365-2990
Volume :
47
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Neuropathology and applied neurobiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33826763
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/nan.12716