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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Raj Somarajan Praveen) "

Search: WFRF:(Raj Somarajan Praveen)

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1.
  • de Ståhl, Teresita Diaz, et al. (author)
  • The Swedish childhood tumor biobank : systematic collection and molecular characterization of all pediatric CNS and other solid tumors in Sweden
  • 2023
  • In: Journal of Translational Medicine. - : BioMed Central (BMC). - 1479-5876. ; 21
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The Swedish Childhood Tumor Biobank (BTB) is a nonprofit national infrastructure for collecting tissue samples and genomic data from pediatric patients diagnosed with central nervous system (CNS) and other solid tumors. The BTB is built on a multidisciplinary network established to provide the scientific community with standardized biospecimens and genomic data, thereby improving knowledge of the biology, treatment and outcome of childhood tumors. As of 2022, over 1100 fresh-frozen tumor samples are available for researchers. We present the workflow of the BTB from sample collection and processing to the generation of genomic data and services offered. To determine the research and clinical utility of the data, we performed bioinformatics analyses on next-generation sequencing (NGS) data obtained from a subset of 82 brain tumors and patient blood-derived DNA combined with methylation profiling to enhance the diagnostic accuracy and identified germline and somatic alterations with potential biological or clinical significance. The BTB procedures for collection, processing, sequencing, and bioinformatics deliver high-quality data. We observed that the findings could impact patient management by confirming or clarifying the diagnosis in 79 of the 82 tumors and detecting known or likely driver mutations in 68 of 79 patients. In addition to revealing known mutations in a broad spectrum of genes implicated in pediatric cancer, we discovered numerous alterations that may represent novel driver events and specific tumor entities. In summary, these examples reveal the power of NGS to identify a wide number of actionable gene alterations. Making the power of NGS available in healthcare is a challenging task requiring the integration of the work of clinical specialists and cancer biologists; this approach requires a dedicated infrastructure, as exemplified here by the BTB.
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2.
  • Wadensten, Elisabeth, et al. (author)
  • Diagnostic Yield From a Nationwide Implementation of Precision Medicine for all Children With Cancer.
  • 2023
  • In: JCO precision oncology. - : American Society of Clinical Oncology. - 2473-4284. ; 7
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Several studies have indicated that broad genomic characterization of childhood cancer provides diagnostically and/or therapeutically relevant information in selected high-risk cases. However, the extent to which such characterization offers clinically actionable data in a prospective broadly inclusive setting remains largely unexplored.We implemented prospective whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of tumor and germline, complemented by whole-transcriptome sequencing (RNA-Seq) for all children diagnosed with a primary or relapsed solid malignancy in Sweden. Multidisciplinary molecular tumor boards were set up to integrate genomic data in the clinical decision process along with a medicolegal framework enabling secondary use of sequencing data for research purposes.During the study's first 14 months, 118 solid tumors from 117 patients were subjected to WGS, with complementary RNA-Seq for fusion gene detection in 52 tumors. There was no significant geographic bias in patient enrollment, and the included tumor types reflected the annual national incidence of pediatric solid tumor types. Of the 112 tumors with somatic mutations, 106 (95%) exhibited alterations with a clear clinical correlation. In 46 of 118 tumors (39%), sequencing only corroborated histopathological diagnoses, while in 59 cases (50%), it contributed to additional subclassification or detection of prognostic markers. Potential treatment targets were found in 31 patients (26%), most commonly ALK mutations/fusions (n = 4), RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK pathway mutations (n = 14), FGFR1 mutations/fusions (n = 5), IDH1 mutations (n = 2), and NTRK2 gene fusions (n = 2). In one patient, the tumor diagnosis was revised based on sequencing. Clinically relevant germline variants were detected in 8 of 94 patients (8.5%).Up-front, large-scale genomic characterization of pediatric solid malignancies provides diagnostically valuable data in the majority of patients also in a largely unselected cohort.
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3.
  • Wadensten, Elisabeth, et al. (author)
  • Diagnostic Yield From a Nationwide Implementation of Precision Medicine for all Children With Cancer
  • 2023
  • In: JCO Precision Oncology. - : American Society of Clinical Oncology. - 2473-4284. ; :7
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Purpose: Several studies have indicated that broad genomic characterization of childhood cancer provides diagnostically and/or therapeutically relevant information in selected high-risk cases. However, the extent to which such characterization offers clinically actionable data in a prospective broadly inclusive setting remains largely unexplored.Methods: We implemented prospective whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of tumor and germline, complemented by whole-transcriptome sequencing (RNA-Seq) for all children diagnosed with a primary or relapsed solid malignancy in Sweden. Multidisciplinary molecular tumor boards were set up to integrate genomic data in the clinical decision process along with a medicolegal framework enabling secondary use of sequencing data for research purposes.Results: During the study's first 14 months, 118 solid tumors from 117 patients were subjected to WGS, with complementary RNA-Seq for fusion gene detection in 52 tumors. There was no significant geographic bias in patient enrollment, and the included tumor types reflected the annual national incidence of pediatric solid tumor types. Of the 112 tumors with somatic mutations, 106 (95%) exhibited alterations with a clear clinical correlation. In 46 of 118 tumors (39%), sequencing only corroborated histopathological diagnoses, while in 59 cases (50%), it contributed to additional subclassification or detection of prognostic markers. Potential treatment targets were found in 31 patients (26%), most commonly ALK mutations/fusions (n = 4), RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK pathway mutations (n = 14), FGFR1 mutations/fusions (n = 5), IDH1 mutations (n = 2), and NTRK2 gene fusions (n = 2). In one patient, the tumor diagnosis was revised based on sequencing. Clinically relevant germline variants were detected in 8 of 94 patients (8.5%).Conclusion: Up-front, large-scale genomic characterization of pediatric solid malignancies provides diagnostically valuable data in the majority of patients also in a largely unselected cohort.
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Type of publication
journal article (3)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (3)
Author/Editor
Kogner, Per (3)
Sandgren, Johanna (3)
Nister, Monica (3)
Mertens, Fredrik (2)
Rosenquist, Richard (2)
Taylan, Fulya (2)
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Wirta, Valtteri (2)
Pronk, Cornelis Jan (2)
Ljungman, Gustaf, 19 ... (2)
Gisselsson, David (2)
Noren-Nyström, Ulrik ... (2)
Puls, Florian (2)
Arvidsson, Linda (2)
Maqbool, Khurram (2)
Tesi, Bianca (2)
Díaz de Ståhl, Teres ... (2)
Orsmark-Pietras, Chr ... (2)
Pradhananga, Sailend ... (2)
Lagerstedt-Robinson, ... (2)
Sabel, Magnus, 1966 (2)
Samuelsson, Sofie (2)
Abel, Frida, 1974 (1)
Martinsson, Tommy, 1 ... (1)
Fransson, Susanne, 1 ... (1)
Siesjö, Peter (1)
Ljungman, Gustaf (1)
Nordgren, Ann (1)
Fagman, Henrik, 1975 (1)
Gustavsson, Bengt (1)
de Ståhl, Teresita D ... (1)
Martinsson, Tommy (1)
Shamikh, Alia (1)
Strid, Tobias, 1982- (1)
Nordgren, Ann, 1964 (1)
Øra, Ingrid (1)
Mayrhofer, Markus, 1 ... (1)
Vogt, Hartmut (1)
Bontell, Thomas Olss ... (1)
Strid, Tobias (1)
Fransson, Susanne (1)
Sandström, Per-Erik (1)
Juhos, Szilvester (1)
Basmaci, Elisa (1)
Prochazka, Gabriela (1)
Garcia, Maxime (1)
Somarajan, Praveen R ... (1)
Zielinska-Chomej, Ka ... (1)
Illies, Christopher (1)
Stenman, Jakob (1)
Pfeifer, Susan, 1948 ... (1)
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University
University of Gothenburg (2)
Uppsala University (2)
Lund University (2)
Karolinska Institutet (2)
Umeå University (1)
Royal Institute of Technology (1)
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Language
English (3)
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Medical and Health Sciences (3)
Natural sciences (1)
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