Next-generation prostate cancer biobanking: toward a processing protocol amenable for the International Cancer Genome Consortium.

TitleNext-generation prostate cancer biobanking: toward a processing protocol amenable for the International Cancer Genome Consortium.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsEsgueva R, Park K, Kim R, Kitabayashi N, Barbieri CE, Dorsey PJ, Abraham C, Banerjee S, Leung RA, Tewari AK, Terry S, Shevchuk MM, Rickman DS, Rubin MA
Corporate AuthorsWeill Cornell Medical College
JournalDiagn Mol Pathol
Volume21
Issue2
Pagination61-8
Date Published2012 Jun
ISSN1533-4066
KeywordsAdult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, DNA, Genes, Neoplasm, Genome, Human, Humans, International Cooperation, Male, Middle Aged, Prostate, Prostatectomy, Prostatic Neoplasms, RNA, Sequence Analysis, RNA, Specimen Handling, Tissue Banks
Abstract

Next-generation DNA and RNA sequencing requires intact nucleic acids from high-quality human tissue samples to better elucidate the molecular basis of cancer. We have developed a prostate biobanking protocol to acquire suitable samples for sequencing without compromising the accuracy of clinical diagnosis. To assess the clinical implications of implementing this protocol, we evaluated 105 consecutive radical prostatectomy specimens from November 2008 to February 2009. Alternating levels of prostate samples were submitted to Surgical Pathology as formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded blocks and to the institutional biobank as frozen blocks. Differences in reported pathologic characteristics between clinical and procured specimens were compared. Clinical staging and grading were not affected by the biobank protocol. Tumor foci on frozen hematoxylin and eosin slides were identified and high-density tumor foci were scored and processed for DNA and RNA extractions for sequencing. Both DNA and RNA were extracted from 22 cases of 44 with high-density tumor foci. Eighty-two percent (18/22) of the samples passed rigorous quality control steps for DNA and RNA sequencing. To date, DNA extracted from 7 cases has undergone whole-genome sequencing, and RNA from 18 cases has been RNA sequenced. This protocol provides prostate tissue for high-throughput biomedical research and confirms the feasibility of actively integrating prostate cancer into The Cancer Genome Atlas Program, a member of the International Cancer Genome Consortium.

DOI10.1097/PDM.0b013e31823b6da6
Alternate JournalDiagn. Mol. Pathol.
PubMed ID22555088
PubMed Central IDPMC4123125
Grant ListU01 CA111275 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States