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A multilocus technique for risk evaluation of patients with neuroblastoma

Authors :
Alexander Valent
Gian Paolo Tonini
Bárbara Marques
Ales Vicha
Ruth Ladenstein
Gerhard Aigner
Jérôme Couturier
Clare Bedwell
Nicole Gross
Ulrike Pötschger
Mario Drobics
Bettina Brunner
Gabriele Amann
Deborah A. Tweddle
Raymond L. Stallings
Frank Speleman
Valérie Combaret
Sandra Preuner
Tommy Martinsson
Andrea Ziegler
Jean Bénard
Klaus Beiske
Marta Jeison
Robert J.L. Schuit
Inge M. Ambros
Peter F. Ambros
John Lunec
Katia Mazzocco
Nadine Van Roy
Raffaella Defferrari
Nick Bown
Rosa Noguera
Eva Villamón
Gudrun Schleiermacher
Source :
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. 17(4)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Purpose: Precise and comprehensive analysis of neuroblastoma genetics is essential for accurate risk evaluation and only pangenomic/multilocus approaches fulfill the present-day requirements. We present the establishment and validation of the PCR-based multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) technique for neuroblastoma. Experimental Design: A neuroblastoma-specific MLPA kit was designed by the SIOP Europe Neuroblastoma Biology Committee in cooperation with MRC-Holland. The contained target sequences cover 19 chromosomal arms and reference loci. Validation was performed by single locus and pangenomic techniques (n = 174). Dilution experiments for determination of minimal tumor cell percentage were performed and testing of reproducibility was checked by interlaboratory testing (n = 15). Further 156 neuroblastomas were used for establishing the amplification cutoff level. Results: The MLPA technique was tested in 310 neuroblastomas and 8 neuroblastoma cell lines (including validation and amplification cutoff level testing). Intertechnique validation showed a high concordance rate (99.5%). Interlaboratory MLPA testing (κ = 0.95, P < 0.01) revealed 7 discrepant of 1,490 results (0.5%). Validation by pangenomic techniques showed a single discordance of 190 consensus results (0.5%). The test results led to formulation of interpretation standards and to a kit revision. The minimal tumor cell percentage was fixed at 60%. Conclusions: The recently designed neuroblastoma-specific MLPA kit covers all chromosomal regions demanded by the International Neuroblastoma Risk Group for therapy stratification and includes all hitherto described genetic loci of prognostic interest for future studies and can be modified or extended at any time. Moreover, the technique is cost effective, reliable, and robust with a high interlaboratory and intertechnique concordance. Clin Cancer Res; 17(4); 792–804. ©2011 AACR.

Details

ISSN :
15573265
Volume :
17
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0315b067f3b0d85dc5aa437d75ee29b9