BMC Medical Research Methodology (Dec 2018)

Quantity and quality of nucleic acids extracted from archival formalin fixed paraffin embedded prostate biopsies

  • Jessica Carlsson,
  • Sabina Davidsson,
  • Jonna Fridfeldt,
  • Francesca Giunchi,
  • Valentina Fiano,
  • Chiara Grasso,
  • Renata Zelic,
  • Lorenzo Richiardi,
  • Ove Andrén,
  • Andreas Pettersson,
  • Michelangelo Fiorentino,
  • Olof Akre

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-018-0628-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background In Sweden, human tissue samples obtained from diagnostic and surgical procedures have for decades been routinely stored in a formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded, form. Through linkage with nationwide registers, these samples are available for molecular studies to identify biomarkers predicting mortality even in slow-progressing prostate cancer. However, tissue fixation causes modifications of nucleic acids, making it challenging to extract high-quality nucleic acids from formalin fixated tissues. Methods In this study, the efficiency of five commercial nucleic acid extraction kits was compared on 30 prostate biopsies with normal histology, and the quantity and quality of the products were compared using spectrophotometry and Agilent’s BioAnalyzer. Student’s t-test’s and Bland-Altman analyses were performed in order to investigate differences in nucleic acid quantity and quality between the five kits. The best performing extraction kits were subsequently tested on an additional 84 prostate tumor tissues. A Spearman’s correlation test and linear regression analyses were performed in order to investigate the impact of tissue age and amount of tissue on nucleic acid quantity and quality. Results Nucleic acids extracted with RNeasy® FFPE and QIAamp® DNA FFPE Tissue kit had the highest quantity and quality, and was used for extraction from 84 tumor tissues. Nucleic acids were successfully extracted from all biopsies, and the amount of tumor (in millimeter) was found to have the strongest association with quantity and quality of nucleic acids. Conclusions To conclude, this study shows that the choice of nucleic acid extraction kit affects the quantity and quality of extracted products. Furthermore, we show that extraction of nucleic acids from archival formalin-fixed prostate biopsies is possible, allowing molecular studies to be performed on this valuable sample collection.

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