As more clinically relevant cancer genes are identified, comprehensive
diagnostic approaches are needed to match patients to therapies, raising the
challenge of optimization and analytical validation of assays that interrogate
millions of bases of cancer genomes altered by multiple mechanisms. Here we
describe a test based on massively parallel DNA sequencing to characterize base
substitutions, short insertions and deletions (indels), copy number alterations
and selected fusions across 287 cancer-related genes from routine formalin-fixed
and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) clinical specimens. We implemented a practical
validation strategy with reference samples of pooled cell lines that model key
determinants of accuracy, including mutant allele frequency, indel length and
amplitude of copy change. Test sensitivity achieved was 95–99%
across alteration types, with high specificity (positive predictive value
>99%). We confirmed accuracy using 249 FFPE cancer specimens
characterized by established assays. Application of the test to 2,221 clinical
cases revealed clinically actionable alterations in 76% of tumors, three
times the number of actionable alterations detected by current diagnostic
tests.
Kaposi’s sarcoma (KS) is the most common cancer in HIV-infected untreated individuals. Kaposi’s sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV; also known as human herpesvirus 8 (HHV8)) is the infectious cause of this neoplasm. In this Review we describe the epidemiology of KS and KSHV, and the insights into the remarkable mechanisms through which KSHV can induce KS that have been gained in the past 16 years. KSHV latent transcripts, such as latency-associated nuclear antigen (LANA), viral cyclin, viral FLIP and viral-encoded microRNAs, drive cell proliferation and prevent apoptosis, whereas KSHV lytic proteins, such as viral G protein-coupled receptor, K1 and virally encoded cytokines (viral interleukin-6 and viral chemokines) further contribute to the unique angioproliferative and inflammatory KS lesions through a mechanism called paracrine neoplasia.
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