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Clinical Genotyping of Lung Cancer in the Era of Personalized Medicine Laura J. Tafe, MD Assistant Professor of Pathology Assistant Director, Molecular Pathology CTOP Retreat May 23, 2014 Overview • Overview of molecular workflow • NGS 50 gene panel experience • Mass spec ALK project Histology matters Lung Cancer Histology Adenocarcinoma Squamous cell carcinoma Large cell carcinoma Small cell carcinoma Any primary lung cancer with adenocarcinoma histology May be mixed (ADC-SQC, ADC-SCLC) No pure SQC, SCLC or neuroendocrine Poorly differentiated tumors should be tested Pre-analytical Workflow Molecular testing ordered by surgical pathologist 2 H&E and 10 USS MG Pathologist review of H&E for adequacy and % tumor 1 H&E and 2 USS to FISH lab to hold for additional testing as needed (rearrangements by FISH) DNA extracted from USS in molecular laboratory for PCR NGS (Analytical) Workflow Sample Preparation Library Preparation Emulsification and Enrichment DNA Extraction -minimum tumor cellularity: 10% -8 unstained slides PCR AmpliSeq HotSpot Cancer Panel • 201 amplicons • 50 genes • Require 10ng DNA Emulsification PCR Clonal amplification of DNA on Ion Spheres (ISP’s) DNA Quantification PicoGreen Method Sequencing and Data Analysis 318 IonChip Majority of amplicon coverage >500X • Variant Calling Ion Torrent Variant Caller Plugin Reference genome: hg19 • ISP’s quantification • Enrichment of ISP’s with DNA FuPa Treatment • • Barcode Adaptor Ligation Data Annotation, Review and Sign-out Library Quantification and Pooling (qPCR) Total time: ~9h Hands on time: ~3h Total time: ~8h Hands on time: ~4h Day 1-2 Day 3-4 Reporting Golden Helix SVS Software Variant Call Summary Variant Prediction Total time: ~7h Hands on time: ~1h Day 5 Total time: ~14h Hands on time: ~5h Courtesy of F. de Abreu Day 6-7 Ion Torrent Technology • Simple, robust, scalable and cost effective. Low cost+, convenient, single use device. Easy, automatic fluid connections. Match the size of the Ion chip to your application. AmpliSeq Cancer Hotspot Panel v2 Single pool of primers • 207 Primer Pairs • 50 Genes • 10 ng input DNA Targets genomic "hot spots“ 1 year: ~ 500 clinical samples + ~ 100 research samples Weekly run: ~ 20 samples TAT: 7 days (samples in the lab) ABL1 EGFR GNAS KRAS PTPN11 AKT1 ERBB2 GNAQ MET RB1 ALK ERBB4 HNF1A MLH1 RET APC EZH2 HRAS MPL SMAD4 ATM FBXW7 IDH1 NOTCH1 SMARCB1 BRAF FGFR1 IDH2 NPM1 SMO CDH1 FGFR2 JAK2 NRAS SRC CDKN2A FGFR3 JAK3 PDGFRA STK11 CSF1R FLT3 KDR PIK3CA TP53 CTNNB1 GNA11 KIT PTEN VHL Post-analytical Workflow Analysis Pipeline: Variant-Calling and Annotation Run Variant Caller Version 4.0 Upload VCF File to Golden Helix SVS (Version 7.7.8) and Annotate Variants FILTER Non-Coding Variants FILTER Synonymous Variants FILTER <5% SNVs <20%INDELS Review Remaining Variants in IGV, FILTER Homopolymeric Variants and Sequencing Artifacts Variant calls and annotation: • Initially filtered to remove non-coding and synonymous mutations. • Golden Helix then used to annotate and help predict pathogenicity. • All reported variants received sufficient coverage and were of high enough frequency to be annotated as true variants. Report Remaining Variants To Clinicians EGFR Exon 21 p.L858R (c.2573T>G) EGFR Exon 19 18bp deletion Example report INDICATION FOR STUDY: Lung, right (CT-guided needle core biopsy): Adenocarcinoma SPECIMEN ANALYZED: Cytology or surgical #, Block # Analysis: Examination of DNA extracted from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tumor tissue for somatic mutation analysis. Results: The following gene variants were identified in the submitted tissue: CLINICALLY ACTIONABLE: BRAF: NORMAL EGFR: MUTATION KRAS: NORMAL PIK3CA: NORMAL NOT CLINICALLY INDICATED: TP53 c.421C>T c.2573T>G p.L858R p.R141C Exon 21 Exon 4 Interpretation: After review of the pathology report and slides, the specimen (N-14-00257, Block A2) was selected for mutation analysis from a panel of 50 genes. The results of this test indicate that tumor cells comprising 25.0% of the tissue specimen analyzed were normal for BRAF, KRAS and hotspots in 46 other genes. A p.L858R activating mutation was detected in exon 21 of the EGFR gene suggesting that this patient may benefit from anti-EGFR therapy. In addition, a mutation of unknown clinical significance was detected in the TP53 gene. Therapeutic options related to the presence or absence of mutations should be carefully assessed. Availability of other therapeutic indications and clinical trials may be possible. For additional information on reported variants please visit: http://www.mycancergenome.org/content/disease/lung-cancer 203 non-squamous NSCLC cases on Ion Torrent AmpliSeq Hotspot Panel v2 (May 2013 – May 2014) Specimen types tested Resection: 24% Cell Block: 33% Consult: 13% Needle Core: 30% Types of Mutations QNS: 8% Wild Type: 13% Actionable: 48% VUS: 31% EGFR KRAS BRAF ERBB2 ins PIK3CA Most Frequent Mutations Other: 16% KRAS: 30% STK11: 10% EGFR: 12% TP53: 32% Other = Mutations in 32 additional genes were seen in 1-7 cases each Uncommon mutations • EGFR – 2 – Exon 20 insertion (1%) – 3 – Exon 18 (1.5%) – 3 – T790M (1.5%) • BRAF – 7 mutations (only 3 - V600E) (3%) • ERBB2 – 2 – exon 20 insertion (1%) • PIK3CA – 9 mutations (4%) Limitations of AmpliSeq • CNVs • Structural variants (rearrangements/translocations) • mRNA Quantification of ALK from Formalin-Fixed Paraffin-Embedded Non-small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) Tissue by Mass Spectrometry Christopher P. Hartley 1, Wei-Li Liao2, Jon Burrows2, Todd Hembrough2, and Laura J. Tafe1 1Department of Pathology, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH and 2OncoPlex Diagnostics, Rockville, MD Selected Reaction Monitoring (SRM) - MS ALK exons SRM peptide (outside KD) 5’ NH2 3’ COOH Wang R et al. Clin Cancer Res 2012;18:4725-4732 11 samples from 10 patients (6 with ALK rearrangement) Heterozygous Single Nucleotide Point Mutation in ALK for DH9 (ALK kinase domain: 1116-1392, peptide 1417D P E G V P P L L V S Q Q AK1431 is C-terminal to the KD) Heterozygous (T in one allele and G in the other) C0483-T2LR-C (DH9) Heterozygous G/T results in DPEGVPPLLVQQAK (WT) from one allele and DPEGVPPLLVSQ*AK (Q to stop codon*) in the second allele introducing a stop codon (p.Q1429X) within the MS targeted peptide (missing aa 14291620). Homozygous (G in both alleles) C0481-T2LR-C (DH1) Homozygous G results in DPEGVPPLLVQQAK (WT) from both DNA alleles. Crizotinib resistance in ALK-positive lung cancer Shaw. JCO. 2013. 31(8):1105-1111 Hypothesis: Missing 192aa might alter the function of the ALK fusion protein and response to ALK inhibitors Stage 68 Smoking hx Non-smoker (3 pyr; 40 yrs prior) Progression free survival pT2a N2 7 mos + (?) NED - lost to f/u M 54 Never smoker pT2a pN2 14 mos NED DH3 F 49 pT1a N2 19 mos DH4 M 76 stage 4 12 mos NED AWD -Stable brain met DH5/6 M 62 pT2b pN1 no crizotinib tx NED DH9 M 65 Never smoker Former (stopped 40 pyr) Never smoker (second hand smoke exposure 22 yrs) Smoker (quit 1 yr ago) pT2 pN1 4 mos AWD DH# M/F Age at dx DH1 F DH2 Status Conclusions • The Ion Torrent Ampliseq technology: Successfully performed on small biopsy / cytology specimens Requires very little input DNA (10ng) • Mass Spectrometry proteomic techniques are complementary to molecular analysis and have potential to identify clinically meaningful biomarkers