Error-corrected flow-based sequencing at whole-genome scale and its application to circulating cell-free DNA profiling. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Differentiating sequencing errors from true variants is a central genomics challenge, calling for error suppression strategies that balance costs and sensitivity. For example, circulating cell-free DNA (ccfDNA) sequencing for cancer monitoring is limited by sparsity of circulating tumor DNA, abundance of genomic material in samples and preanalytical error rates. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) can overcome the low abundance of ccfDNA by integrating signals across the mutation landscape, but higher costs limit its wide adoption. Here, we applied deep (~120×) lower-cost WGS (Ultima Genomics) for tumor-informed circulating tumor DNA detection within the part-per-million range. We further leveraged lower-cost sequencing by developing duplex error-corrected WGS of ccfDNA, achieving 7.7 × 10-7 error rates, allowing us to assess disease burden in individuals with melanoma and urothelial cancer without matched tumor sequencing. This error-corrected WGS approach will have broad applicability across genomics, allowing for accurate calling of low-abundance variants at efficient cost and enabling deeper mapping of somatic mosaicism as an emerging central aspect of aging and disease.

authors

publication date

  • April 11, 2025

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 105002353221

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/s41592-025-02648-9

PubMed ID

  • 40217113