TY - JOUR
T1 - Assay design affects the interpretation of T-cell receptor gamma gene rearrangements
T2 - Comparison of the performance of a one-tube assay with the BIOMED-2-based TCRG gene clonality assay
AU - Cushman-Vokoun, Allison M.
AU - Connealy, Solomon
AU - Greiner, Timothy C.
N1 - Funding Information:
Supported by the Department of Pathology and Microbiology, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska.
PY - 2010/11/1
Y1 - 2010/11/1
N2 - Interpretation of capillary electrophoresis results derived from multiplexed fluorochrome-labeled primer sets can be complicated by small peaks, which may be incorrectly interpreted as clonal T-cell receptor-γ gene rearrangements. In this report, different assay designs were used to illustrate how design may adversely affect specificity. Ten clinical cases, with subclonal peaks containing one of the two infrequently used joining genes, were identified with a tri-color, one-tube assay. The DNA was amplified with the same NED fluorochrome on all three joining primers, first combined (one-color assay) and then amplified separately using a single NED-labeled joining primer. The single primer assay design shows how insignificant peaks could easily be wrongly interpreted as clonal T-cell receptor-γ gene rearrangements. Next, the performance of the one-tube assay was compared with the two-tube BIOMED-2-based TCRG Gene Clonality Assay in a series of 44 cases. Whereas sensitivity was similar between the two methods (92.9% vs. 96.4%; P = 0.55), specificity was significantly less in the BIOMED-2 assay (87.5% vs. 56.3%; P = 0.049) when a 2x ratio was used to define clonality. Specificity was improved to 81.3% by the use of a 5x peak height ratio (P = 0.626). These findings illustrate how extra caution is needed in interpreting a design with multiple, separate distributions, which is more difficult to interpret than a single distribution assay.
AB - Interpretation of capillary electrophoresis results derived from multiplexed fluorochrome-labeled primer sets can be complicated by small peaks, which may be incorrectly interpreted as clonal T-cell receptor-γ gene rearrangements. In this report, different assay designs were used to illustrate how design may adversely affect specificity. Ten clinical cases, with subclonal peaks containing one of the two infrequently used joining genes, were identified with a tri-color, one-tube assay. The DNA was amplified with the same NED fluorochrome on all three joining primers, first combined (one-color assay) and then amplified separately using a single NED-labeled joining primer. The single primer assay design shows how insignificant peaks could easily be wrongly interpreted as clonal T-cell receptor-γ gene rearrangements. Next, the performance of the one-tube assay was compared with the two-tube BIOMED-2-based TCRG Gene Clonality Assay in a series of 44 cases. Whereas sensitivity was similar between the two methods (92.9% vs. 96.4%; P = 0.55), specificity was significantly less in the BIOMED-2 assay (87.5% vs. 56.3%; P = 0.049) when a 2x ratio was used to define clonality. Specificity was improved to 81.3% by the use of a 5x peak height ratio (P = 0.626). These findings illustrate how extra caution is needed in interpreting a design with multiple, separate distributions, which is more difficult to interpret than a single distribution assay.
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U2 - 10.2353/jmoldx.2010.090183
DO - 10.2353/jmoldx.2010.090183
M3 - Article
C2 - 20959612
AN - SCOPUS:78049412240
SN - 1525-1578
VL - 12
SP - 787
EP - 796
JO - Journal of Molecular Diagnostics
JF - Journal of Molecular Diagnostics
IS - 6
ER -