4.6 Article

Rapid, reliable, and reproducible molecular sub-grouping of clinical medulloblastoma samples

Journal

ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA
Volume 123, Issue 4, Pages 615-626

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00401-011-0899-7

Keywords

Medulloblastoma; Molecular classification; Clinical trials; NanoString

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Hospital for Sick Children
  3. Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation
  4. Genome Canada
  5. Genome BC
  6. Terry Fox Research Institute
  7. Ontario Institute for Cancer Research
  8. Pediatric Oncology Group Ontario
  9. Family of Kathleen Lorette
  10. Clark H. Smith Brain Tumor Centre
  11. Montreal Children's Hospital Foundation
  12. Hospital for Sick Children: Sonia and Arthur Labatt Brain Tumor Research Centre
  13. Chief of Research Fund
  14. Cancer Genetics Program
  15. Garron Family Cancer Centre
  16. B.R.A.I.N. Child
  17. NIH [NS055089]

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The diagnosis of medulloblastoma likely encompasses several distinct entities, with recent evidence for the existence of at least four unique molecular subgroups that exhibit distinct genetic, transcriptional, demographic, and clinical features. Assignment of molecular subgroup through routine profiling of high-quality RNA on expression microarrays is likely impractical in the clinical setting. The planning and execution of medulloblastoma clinical trials that stratify by subgroup, or which are targeted to a specific subgroup requires technologies that can be economically, rapidly, reliably, and reproducibly applied to formalin-fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) specimens. In the current study, we have developed an assay that accurately measures the expression level of 22 medulloblastoma subgroup-specific signature genes (CodeSet) using nanoString nCounter Technology. Comparison of the nanoString assay with Affymetrix expression array data on a training series of 101 medulloblastomas of known subgroup demonstrated a high concordance (Pearson correlation r = 0.86). The assay was validated on a second set of 130 non-overlapping medulloblastomas of known subgroup, correctly assigning 98% (127/130) of tumors to the appropriate subgroup. Reproducibility was demonstrated by repeating the assay in three independent laboratories in Canada, the United States, and Switzerland. Finally, the nanoString assay could confidently predict subgroup in 88% of recent FFPE cases, of which 100% had accurate subgroup assignment. We present an assay based on nanoString technology that is capable of rapidly, reliably, and reproducibly assigning clinical FFPE medulloblastoma samples to their molecular subgroup, and which is highly suited for future medulloblastoma clinical trials.

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