Concordance of assays designed for the quantification of JAK2V617F: a multicenter study

Éric Lippert, François Girodon(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon Bourgogne), E. Hammond(Murdoch University), Jaroslav Jelı́nek(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), N. Scott Reading(ARUP Laboratories (United States)), Boris Fehse(Eppendorf (Germany)), Katy Hanlon(Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital), M. H. A. Hermans(Jeroen Bosch Ziekenhuis), C. Richard(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Clermont-Ferrand), Sabina Świerczek(University of Utah), Valérie Ugo(Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Brest), Serge Carillo(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nîmes), Véronique Harrivel(Hôtel-Dieu de Paris), Christophe Marzac(Hôtel-Dieu de Paris), Daniela Pietra(Policlinico San Matteo Fondazione), Marta Sobas(University of Basel), Morgane Mounier(Université de Bourgogne), Marina Migeon(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Bordeaux), Sian Ellard(Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital), Nicolaus Kröger(Eppendorf (Germany)), Richard Herrmann(Murdoch University), Josef T. Prchal(ARUP Laboratories (United States)), Radek C. Skoda(University of Basel), Sylvie Hermouet(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nantes)
Haematologica
November 11, 2008
Cited by 77Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Many different techniques have been designed for the quantification of JAK2V617F allelic burden, sometimes producing discrepant results. DESIGN AND METHODS: JAK2V617F quantification techniques were compared among 16 centers using 11 assays based on quantitative polymerase chain reaction (with mutation-specific primers or probes, or fluorescent resonance energy transfer/melting curve analysis), allele-specific polymerase chain reaction, conventional sequencing or pyrosequencing. RESULTS: A first series of blinded samples (granulocyte DNA, n=29) was analyzed. Seven assays (12 centers) reported values inside the mean +/- 2SD; the mean coefficient of variation was 31%. Sequencing techniques lacked sensitivity, and strong discrepancies were observed with four techniques, which could be attributed to inadequate standards or to different modes of expression of results. Indeed, quantification of JAK2V617F in relation to another control gene produced higher than expected values, suggesting the possibility of more than two JAK2 copies/cell. After calibration of assays with common 1% to 100% JAK2V617F standards (dilutions of UKE-1 cells in normal leukocytes), 14 centers tested ten new samples. JAK2V617F allelic burdens greater or equal than 1% were then reliably quantified by five techniques -- one allele specific-polymerase chain reaction and four TaqMan allele-specific quantitative polymerase chain reaction assays, including one previously giving results outside the mean +/- 2SD -- with a lower mean coefficient of variation (21%). Of these, only the two TaqMan allele-specific quantitative polymerase chain reaction assays with primer-based specificity could detect 0.2% JAK2V617F. CONCLUSIONS: Techniques expressing the allelic burden as JAK2V617F/total JAK2 and using a common set of standards produced similar quantification results but with variable sensitivity. Calibration to a reference standard improved reproducibility.


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