Perspectives From an Expert-Guided Discussion on Maximizing the Research Potential of Small Biopsy Tissue
Lokesh Agrawal, P. Mickey Williams, Helen M. Moore, Kelly B. Engel, Sarah R. Greytak, Alda L. Tam, J. Keith Killian, Daniel T. Merrick, Ralph E. Parchment, Stanley R. Hamilton, Lyndsay N. Harris, James H. DoroshowPURPOSE
Tissue biopsy specimens, both remnant diagnostic specimens and those collected for ancillary study, are an invaluable resource for clinical oncology research. However, using biopsy specimens for molecular research is associated with innate challenges, such as insufficient tissue and/or tumor content, and low nucleic acid yields as well as analyte degradation due to suboptimal preanalytical workflows.
METHODS
The National Cancer Institute's Biorepositories and Biospecimen Research Branch convened a meeting that included expert-guided discussions that centered on strategies to mitigate these challenges and their effects on molecular analysis.
RESULTS
Participants, who included medical oncologists, interventional radiologists, pathologists, and molecular biologists, offered best practice guidance on biopsy collection, preservation, storage, and extraction techniques. Their recommendations were largely based on the optimized workflows that were implemented at their respective institutions, which improved the likelihood of producing reproducible molecular data. Pre- and postcollection techniques, such as clear cross-team communication, prebiopsy scoring based on lesion- and patient-specific criteria, biopsy collection and handling practices, and tumor enrichment options, were also discussed.
CONCLUSION
The proceedings revealed that increasing awareness of the challenges associated with research use of tissue biopsies is key to developing assay-specific strategies that ensure sufficient tumor specimens are available for molecular oncology research. The lessons shared here from large-scale and multicenter trials will, ideally, inform the design of new cancer research studies, thereby harnessing the full potential of valuable clinical biopsy specimens.