4.4 Article

An Isothermal, Multiplex Amplification Assay for Detection and Genotyping of Human Papillomaviruses in Formalin-Fixed, Paraffin-Embedded Tissues

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages 419-428

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmoldx.2019.12.004

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Funding

  1. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) [D-490-17]
  2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [D-490-17]
  3. MSKCC [CRA0077]
  4. Atila Biosystems [CRA0077]
  5. Roche [RD001738/SK2013-0263]
  6. NIH/NCI Cancer Center support grant [P30 CA008748]

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Rapid and accurate identification of human papillomavirus (HPV) is important for both clinical management and population screening. Analytic validation of Atila AmpFire Multiplex HPV assays on formalinfixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) cervix/vulva and oropharynx diagnostic tissue samples was performed. The AmpFire assay incorporates a novel isothermal multiplex amplification coupled with real-time fluorescent detection to detect and genotype 15 high-risk (HR) HPV genotypes. Limits of detection determined by plasmids cloned with HPV genotype-specific sequences were 2 copies/reaction for HPV16, HPV18, and some HR HPV genotypes, and 20 copies/reaction for the remaining HR HPV genotypes. The performance of the AmpFire assays in clinical samples was evaluated using 214 FFPE specimens. The AmpFire assay failed in one clinical specimen for an invalid rate of 0.5%. The AmpFire assay detected HPV in clinical samples with positive percent agreements of 100.00/0 for HPV16, 100.0% for HPV18, and 94.7% for non-16/18 HR HPV, and 100% negative percent agreements for HPV16, HPV18, and non-16/18 HR HPV. Qualitative detection agreement was obtained in the reproducibility study. In summary, the Atila AmpFire HPV assay demonstrated excellent analytic sensitivity and specificity for detection and genotyping of 15 HR HPV genotypes. Assay parameters of simple specimen processing, small sample size requirement, rapid turnaround time, and being near instrument-free render it well suited for HPV detection and genotyping in FFPE specimens.

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