Most tumor profiling assay workflows use tissue biopsy samples that are formalin fixed and paraffin embedded (FFPE), a process that introduces chemical damage in the nucleic acids in the tissue specimen. Depurination, depyrimidination, deamination, oxidation, nicks, and double strand breaks leading to nucleic acid fragmentation may be all found in DNA extracted from FFPE tissue. Cytosine deamination can lead to incorrect sequencing results and may affect accurate identification of lower frequency variants in FFPE DNA samples, but all types of damage affect the sequencing quality (e.g. uniformity of coverage) and downstream genomic analysis.1
In order to assess the effects of nucleic acid damage and extraction method on NGS results and validate the suitability of the analytical workflow for FFPE samples, a full-process FFPE reference material should be included. However, it should be representative of the real-life samples to be useful.1 LGC Clinical Diagnostics developed a broad range of such reference materials for analysis of DNA variants, RNA fusions and complex genomic signatures (TMB, MSI and HRD), including compromised FFPE DNA products that mimic the damage and size profiles of archived tissue biopsy specimens (Figure 2).
Figure 1. The Seraseq® FFPE reference material design process.
When using both a positive FFPE reference material containing the genomic alterations of interest and a WT negative reference in an experiment, it is important to match the fixation level of the samples, to ensure the results are directly comparable and account for background noise introduced by FFPE-induced DNA damage.
Figure 2. A. Representative DNA size profiles of the two fixation levels: compromised (orange) and standard lightly fixed (blue) Seraseq FFPE products. B. Representative DNA size profiles and DIN values of the Compromised FFPE DNA Tumor Reference material after extraction with the Promega Maxwell® RSC DNA FFPE kit (green) and Qiagen QIAamp® DNA FFPE Tissue kit (red). Average DIN values obtained across all released lots were 3.1 ± 0.8 and 4.8 ± 0.5, respectively. DIN values were measured with the gDNA ScreenTape assay. RNA quality was low for both fixation methods, with measured RIN scores ~1 and DV200 >70% (compromised) and RIN scores ~2 (light fixation) after extraction with the Agencourt Formapure Kit and measured with the Agilent Bioanalyzer RNA 6000 Nano Kit (not shown).
The DNA yield, integrity, sequencing metrics and measured variant allele frequencies (VAFs) obtained from FFPE samples can vary widely depending on the extraction kit used.2 This variation can be due to differences in relative extraction efficiency of the DNA of different fragment lengths, as well as bias in the reversal of formaldehyde damage during DNA isolation with the respective kits.
While the Seraseq® FFPE reference materials have a guaranteed yield of >100 ng DNA or >400 ng RNA per curl, this is only applicable when using the same extraction kit as used by LGC Clinical Diagnostics for product release testing as yield can vary (see Table 1). Although lower yield does not affect the downstream results, maximizing the performance of nucleic acid extraction ensures sufficient sample input into different sequencing protocols. Below are some recommendations that can help prevent low yield and sample loss, with a focus on DNA extraction.
FFPE DNA extraction yields (ng) |
|||
Material |
QIAamp DNA FFPE Tissue |
Maxwell RSC DNA FFPE |
AllPrep FFPE |
Seraseq® Compromised FFPE Tumor DNA |
177 ± 50 375 ± 148# |
384 ± 51 290 ± 82# |
551 ± 151# |
Seraseq® FFPE HRD High-Positive |
165 ± 41 |
136 ± 55 |
161 ± 22* |
Seraseq® FFPE HRD Low-Positive |
235 ± 68 |
122 ± 39 |
293 ± 44* |
Seraseq® FFPE HRD Negative |
505 ± 191 |
200 ± 77 |
315 ± 10* |
Seraseq® Lymphoma FFPE DNA |
193 ± 44# |
124 ±11# |
N/A |
FFPE RNA extraction yields (ng) |
|||
Material |
AllPrep DNA/RNA FFPE |
Maxwell RSC RNA FFPE |
Agencourt Formapure |
Seraseq® FFPE Fusion RNA v4 RM |
1021 ± 240 774 ± 178* |
170 ± 28 238 ± 77* |
1177 ± 255 |
Seraseq® FFPE WT |
N/A |
N/A |
449 ± 35 |
Seraseq® Compromised FFPE WT |
N/A |
N/A |
1278 ± 187 |
Table 1. Variability of DNA and RNA yields obtained for different Seraseq® FFPE Reference Materials. For all values, ± is one standard deviation; Unless otherwise indicated, data is representative of a single lot of material. #average internal data from all released lots *data from an external lab.
The Seraseq® sample pellets are smaller and more transparent than those from clinical samples and can be difficult to see. It might help to take the following precautions:
DNA yield extracted using automated protocols tends to be lower than with corresponding manual protocols. When using an automated extraction system, we always recommend validating new automated instrumentation with reference materials such as Seraseq® WT FFPE materials.
Figure 3 (Ed Davis). Seraseq® FFPE material at different stages of extraction. A., Left: Original product tube, within which the curl is contained. Right: Curl after removal from the tube. Typical dimensions are 35mm x 25mm x 10μm. B. Nucleic acid precipitate following ethanol addition. C. Pellet at bottom of tube following centrifugation of the precipitate.
Check out our portfolio of Seraseq® FFPE Reference Materials by clicking here, or on the button below.