Diagnostic Precision

A SeraCare blog focused on precision medicine and advanced clinical diagnostics

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Multi-Lab Study of Fusion RNA Reference Standards for Targeted NGS

Category: NTRK, NGS, RNA fusion, reference materials, AACR

Posted by Andrew Anfora, PhD on Jan 28, 2020 12:00:00 AM
Sourcing assay validation samples as positive run controls or workflow controls in targeted NGS RNA fusion assays remains a challenge today. This is further exacerbated with clinical labs looking to provide validated NGS assays for patient stratification in a host of new drugs in clinical trials or newly approved targeting fusion genes, such as NTRK genes (Larotrectinib, Loxo/Bayer) and Entrectinib (Genentech/Roche) for rare cancers in adult and pediatric patients, and RET (Loxo/Lilly) for lung cancer. SeraCare produces several RNA fusion reference materials. This article describes the development and multi-laboratory evaluation of a pan-cancer multiplexed Fusion RNA reference standard for analysis of clinically relevant fusion genes in solid tumors. The evaluation was conducted at 5 different laboratories on different NGS platforms (amplicon- and hybridization capture-based) as well as at different RNA inputs within a platform. Results highlight the utility of this Fusion RNA reference material to support clinical NGS assays as positive controls in solid tumor cancer patient stratification for many of these fusion-based targeted therapies.
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So Many Posters, So Little Time

Category: TMB, RNA fusion, ctDNA, AACR

Posted by Sam Blier on Jun 6, 2019 12:00:00 AM
Cancer research is purposely methodical and measured. So – somewhat paradoxically – it can be difficult to keep up with the steady stream of discoveries in the literature and presented at conferences like AACR. As a developer and manufacturer of platform-agnostic NGS reference standards, we’re in a unique position to collaborate with cancer genomics assay developers, laboratories, pharmaceutical companies, and other organizations invested in more precise and robust cancer tests.
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Precision Medicine and Clinical Labs: AACR Dinner Seminar Recap

Category: clinical genomics, cfDNA, AACR

Posted by Trevor Brown on Apr 15, 2019 12:00:00 AM
One of the core aims of precision medicine is to provide a more tailored approach to disease diagnosis, therapy selection, and patient monitoring to improve the overall quality of life for patients with disease. Indeed, this aim has been at the heart of the high interest and study of the potential of liquid biopsies to improve patient care in earlier detection of cancer, treatment, and surveillance.
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Presenting NTRK Reference Materials for Global Assay Standardization at AACR 2019

Category: SeraSeq, NTRK, RNA fusion, AACR

Posted by Catherine Huang, PhD on Apr 8, 2019 12:00:00 AM
On the last morning of AACR 2019, I had the privilege of presenting a poster together with my colleague, Sebastian Bender from Bayer AG, in Berlin. Because of this, I didn’t have a chance to attend any talks, but I still wanted to finish out my blog series with highlights from each day of the conference.
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AACR 2019 Day Three: Understanding T-cell Therapy for Unique Cancer Mutations

Category: cancer, AACR

Posted by Catherine Huang, PhD on Apr 4, 2019 12:00:00 AM
My third day at the AACR Annual meeting was a day of phenomenal presentations. I am struggling to choose just one to tell you about because I attended multiple inspiring, thought-provoking, and even entertaining talks today. I decided to report on the plenary presentation by Steven A. Rosenberg entitled “T-cell therapy targeting unique cancer mutations” because I think this story has the most potential to positively impact patient outcomes.
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AACR 2019 Day Two: Learning About the Microbiome in Immuno-Oncology

Category: cancer, AACR

Posted by Catherine Huang, PhD on Apr 3, 2019 12:00:00 AM
At the AACR Annual Meeting, I was most excited to attend the major symposium entitled “The Microbiome as an Orchestrator of Immunity and Cancer Immunotherapy,” which featured three highly informative talks. First, Gregory Sonnenberg from Weill Cornell Medicine gave an overview of how the microbiome contributes to immune homeostasis in the intestine.
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AACR 2019 Day One Highlights: Next-Generation Car T Cells

Category: NGS, AACR

Posted by Catherine Huang, PhD on Apr 2, 2019 12:00:00 AM
I’m excited to be at the Annual AACR meeting at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta, GA. AACR is my favorite scientific meeting because each year I am inspired by the remarkable research presented and leave the conference feeling I’ve learned an incredible amount in just a few days.
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Twists and Turns That Lead From “Curiosity Driven Research” To Innovative Diagnostics

Category: RNA fusion, AACR

Posted by Catherine Huang, PhD on May 8, 2018 12:00:00 AM
Jennifer Doudna is not a cancer biologist and joked that she might deliver her entire lecture at the 2018 AACR Annual Meeting without ever mentioning the word “cancer.” However, when presenting the Irving Weinstein Foundation Distinguished Lecture, she told a fascinating story about how curiosity regarding an interesting sequence motif in bacteria led to gene-editing tools, and how investigation of the mechanisms behind those tools may lead to innovative diagnostics for the future.
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American Association for Cancer Research 2016 ctDNA highlights

Category: cancer, ctDNA, AACR

Posted by Dale Yuzuki on May 2, 2016 12:00:00 AM
At the American Association for Cancer Research conference recently held in New Orleans, LA (April 16 - April 20, 2016) one theme that generated considerable interest was circulating tumor DNA detection, sometimes called liquid biopsy (although that term also encompasses circulating tumor cells). A few of the ctDNA presentations are highlighted below.
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Previewing the American Association for Cancer Research 2016 Conference #AACR16

Category: clinical genomics, cancer, AACR

Posted by Dale Yuzuki on Apr 16, 2016 12:00:00 AM
With over “Cancer Moonshot: A Call to Action” 20,000 scientists, the American Association for Cancer Research conference describes itself as a ‘must-attend event for cancer researchers and the broader cancer community’. One sign of the prominence of this event is the fact that US Vice President Joseph Biden will be delivering a special closing address, in connection with the recent announcement of the announced at the recent World Economic Forum.
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