Intro To Molecular Diagnostics
Intro To Molecular Diagnostics
Intro To Molecular Diagnostics
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E-mail: I.Matsoukas@bolton.ac.uk
Outline
• Introduction to essential concepts in molecular diagnostics that impact on the identification of
markers of human diseases;
• Distinguish the different types of clinical genetic testing currently used in molecular
diagnostics laboratory globally;
• Explain the steps of developing a molecular genetic test from research laboratory-based
findings;
• Evaluate and judge the international standards behind the principles of analytical validity,
clinical validity, and clinical utility when using genetic testing techniques;
• Describe some examples of the different molecular diagnostic platforms and techniques,
including high throughput sequencing.
History of Diseases Diagnostics
The ability of a health care practitioner to efficiently deliver effective care depends upon their
ability to accurately identify the cause of the patient’s problem, i.e., make the diagnosis.
Over time, our understanding of the mechanistic basis of disease has increased and furthered our
ability to make more accurate and specific diagnoses.
Early healers needed only to feel the patient’s skin to diagnose (fever), but with further
understanding of different illnesses and their symptoms, doctors gained the ability to distinguish
between yellow fever, scarlet fever, bubonic fever and other types of infections.
It was the advent of modern microscopy and histopathology, or cellular pathology, in the
nineteenth century, however, which enabled a tremendous leap forward in our understanding of
the biology of disease at a cellular level.
Today, cell cultures, additional antibiotic sensitivity testing, and genetic information from molecular
diagnostics provide critical additional information.
Molecular Diagnostics
ClinicalValidity
Clinical validity asks the question:
is the biomarker being tested associated with a disease or outcome or the response to a treatment?
What is the clinical performance of the test, including its sensitivity (ability to identify those with the
disease), specificity (ability to identify those without the disease), positive predictive value, and negative
predictive value?
Genetic Tests: Clinical Utility
Clinical Utility
Clinical utility is perhaps one of you’re the most important when considerations determining whether or not
to order or cover a genetic test.
While the meaning of the term has some variability depending on the context or source, there is a largely
agreed-upon definition. Four factors are generally considered when evaluating the clinical utility of a genetic
test:
1. Patient outcomes – do the results of the test improve health outcomes (e.g., reduce mortality or
morbidity) or other outcomes that are important to patients such as quality of life?
2. Diagnostic thinking – does the test confirm or change a diagnosis? Does it determine the genetic etiology
for a condition or does it clarify the prognosis?
3. Decision-making guidance – will the test results determine the appropriate dietary, physiological, medical
(including pharmaceutical), and/or surgical intervention?
4. Familial and societal impacts – does the test identify at-risk family members, high-risk race/ethnicities, and
the impact on health systems and/or populations?
Timelines of major Molecular:
Biology Discoveries
Yellow= No change
Can identify structural variation, copy number
variants (CNVs) [lower-resolution arrays].
Molecular Diagnostics Techniques & Platforms
5. Mass spectrometry (MS)
A technology that determines the molecular
mass of a charged particle by measuring its
mass-to- charge (m/z) ratio.
This technology is used to find and analyze
protein based biomarkers and is broadly
classified into gel-based and gel- free
techniques.
Molecular Diagnostics Techniques & Platforms
6. Sanger Sequencing
Molecular Diagnostics Techniques & Platforms
1st, 2nd & 3rd Sequencing Generation
Molecular Diagnostics Techniques & Platforms
7. NGS
A technique used to map out the sequence
of the nucleotides that comprise a strand of
DNS.
Next Generation Sequencing (NGS)
technology was specifically designed to
simultaneously evaluate variation in several
genes.
This technology can also be used to detect
different types of geneticalterations.
• Target Re-sequencing
• RNA-Seq
• Chip-Seq
https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/gene/CFTR
Successful Molecular Diagnostics Examples
2.Therapeutic Decision-Making Example: KRAS
An example of a molecular diagnostic that improves therapeutic decision-making is K-Ras testing. K- Ras is a
protein, encoded by the KRAS gene, that plays a critical role in cell division, cell differentiation, and the self-
destruction of cells. KRAS mutations that produce an abnormal, overactive K-Ras protein are found in
pancreatic, colorectal, lung and other cancers.
Detecting a K-RAS mutation is used to determine patient suitability for certain therapies in colorectal and
lung cancer.
Anti-EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor) drugs (Erbitux (cetuximab) and Vectibix (panitumumab)) are
key therapies for those cancers, but patients whose cancers contain KRAS typically fail to respond to these
anti-EGFR therapies.
Therefore, Erbitux and Vectibix labels recommend against prescribing the drugs for patients with certain KRAS
mutations.
KRAS mutation testing is typically performed for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer or metastatic lung
cancer via direct DNA sequencing or PCR and other amplification-based methods.
Successful Molecular Diagnostics Examples
3.Therapeutic Monitoring Example:HIV
Many molecular diagnostics improve monitoring and management of disease.
Some of the most common monitoring molecular tests are tests for HIV viral load in patients affected with
HIV.
HIV viral load tests are amplification-based tests that measure the amount of HIV RNA to determine how
many copies of the virus are present (measured in copies per milliliter of blood). Keeping viral levels as low as
possible is key to staying healthy with HIV.
We have made great strides in the care of HIV patients in the three decades since HIV was first detected,
essentially transitioning it into a chronic disease in many developed countries.
The HIV viral load test has become an essential tool as patients cycle through different antiretroviral therapies
and develop resistance to certain therapies.
Periodic HIV viral load tests indicate whether or not the disease is progressing, either because an untreated
patient’s immune system can no longer suppress replication of the virus, or because the therapy for a patient in
treatment is no longer working.
Successful Molecular Diagnostics Examples
4. Molecular diagnosis of retinoblastoma
Retinoblastoma (RB) is the most common malignant childhood tumor of the eye and results from inactivation
of both alleles of the RB1 gene.
Nowadays RB genetic diagnosis requires classical chromosome investigations, Multiplex Ligation-dependent
Probe Amplification analysis (MLPA) and Sanger sequencing.
Nevertheless, these techniques show some limitations.
NGS and RB1-custom aCGH have demonstrated to be an effective combined approach in order to
optimize the overall diagnostic procedures of RB.
Custom aCGH is able to accurately detect genomic rearrangements allowing the characterization of their
extension.
NGS is extremely accurate in detecting single nucleotide variants, relatively simple to perform, cost effective,
efficient, sensitive and accurate.
Grotta et al. BMC Cancer (2015) 15:841. DOI 10.1186/s12885-015-1854-0.
Array-CGH profiles of large deletions
in patients with URB & TRB
EGFR mutation L747P led to gefitinib resistance and accelerated liver metastases in a Chinese patient with lung
adenocarcinoma https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4555769/
Quality control: Complex challenges
for molecular diagnostics*
There is a need for sufficient protocols in place to assure the accuracy laboratory genetic test results that could be
achieved through solid quality assurance program including quality control (QC) samples, a validated laboratory test, quality
control monitoring, and error prevention protocols.
One example of a well thought-out approach is the Tang et al., 2012.
Although the article focuses on RNA profiling using large scale arrays, the principles for quality assurance can
be applied to multiplex DNA sequencing and DNA array testing.
The Tang paper describes the successful adaptation of traditional QC principles to minimize failure risk in a
highly complex test protocol.
However, in light of increasing pressure on healthcare budgets and limited personnel, it is understandable that
the laboratory may ask if equivalent assurance of quality can be provided with a simpler approach.
In view of the risks and costs of delivering poor quality results, careful consideration should be given to the possible
effects from QC shortcuts and simplifications.
*Tang W, et al. Quality assurance of RNA expression profiling in clinical laboratories. J Mol Diagn. 2012;14(1)1-11.
Technical issues with NGS implementation
Bioinformatics methods for sequence alignment keep undergoing rapid improvements
– Need to update bioinformatics pipeline at frequent intervals
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E-mail: I.Matsoukas@bolton.ac.uk