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Rapid and sensitive p53 alteration analysis in biopsies from lung cancer patients using a functional assay and a universal oligonucleotide array: a prospective study.
Authors:Coralie Fouquet  Martine Antoine  Pascaline Tisserand  Reyna Favis  Marie Wislez  Fréderic Commo  Nathalie Rabbe  Marie France Carette  Bernard Milleron  Francis Barany  Jacques Cadranel  Gérard Zalcman  Thierry Soussi
Affiliation:EA3493, UPMC-IC of [corrected] Laboratoire de génotoxicologie des tumeurs, Paris, France.
Abstract:
PURPOSE: Molecular profiling of alterations associated with lung cancer holds the promise to define clinical parameters such as response to treatment or survival. Because <5% of small cell lung cancers and <30% of non-small cell lung cancers are surgically resectable, molecular analysis will perforce rely on routinely available clinical samples such as biopsies. Identifying tumor mutations in such samples will require a sensitive and robust technology to overcome signal from excess amounts of normal DNA. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: p53 mutation status was assessed from the DNA and RNA of biopsies collected prospectively from 83 patients with lung cancer. Biopsies were obtained either by conventional bronchoscopy or computed tomography-guided percutaneous biopsy. Matched surgical specimens were available for 22 patients. Three assays were used: direct sequencing; a functional assay in yeast; and a newly developed PCR/ligase detection reaction/Universal DNA array assay. RESULTS: Using the functional assay, p53 mutation was found in 62% of biopsies and 64% of surgical specimens with a concordance of 80%. The sensitivity of the functional assay was determined to be 5%. Direct sequencing confirmed mutations in 92% of surgical specimens but in only 78% of biopsies. The DNA array confirmed 100% of mutations in both biopsies and surgical specimens. Using this newly developed DNA array, we demonstrate the feasibility of directly identifying p53 mutations in clinical samples containing <5% of tumor cells. CONCLUSIONS: The versatility and sensitivity of this new array assay should allow additional development of mutation profiling arrays that could be applied to biological samples with a low tumor cell content such as bronchial aspirates, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, or serum.
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