Establishment of a RESEARCH USE ONLY Condensed-Efficient-Fast (CEF) PITX2 workflow for analysis of PITX2 DNA methylation in small tumor tissue samples CURRENT

The CE-marked therascreen ® PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit (QIAGEN Cat No./ID 873211), a PITX2 DNA methylation assay was introduced to the market in 2018, (hereinafter referred to as the “standard therascreen PITX2 workflow) and represents an in vitro diagnostic to predict outcome to anthracycline-based chemotherapy considered standard-of-care systemic treatment in early breast cancer patients. The Intended Use (IUS) of this kit covers lymph node-positive, estrogen receptor-positive and HER2-negative high-risk breast cancer patients treated in the adjuvant setting with anthracycline-based chemotherapy and requires 400 ng genomic DNA as recommended DNA input extracted from 1-2 x 5 µm Formalin-Fixed-Paraffin-Embedded (FFPE) sections with a minimal total tumor tissue surface area of ≥ 100 mm 2 . In today’s clinical workflow of early high-risk breast cancer patient therapy, increasing number of patients are treated in the neoadjuvant setting after tumor biopsy with anthracycline-based chemotherapy before tumor resection by surgery. Biopsy material size restriction in this clinical area requires for a predictive marker test to be applicable biopsy specimens with tumor tissue surface area’s in the range of 20-50 mm 2 . Therefore, a modified PITX2 workflow protocol - the so-called “Condensed Efficient Fast (CEF)” PITX2 workflow – was developed to address this need. The required modifications of the standard therascreen PITX2 workflow is described in the “bisDNA Preparation” section. The “PMR Detection & Analysis” section of the standard therascreen PITX2 workflow remains unchanged. The new CEF PITX2 workflow is for Research Use Only (RUO) and intended to be used by qualified users such as technicians, molecular biologists/clinical chemists, or physicians. The complete CEF PITX2 workflow is optimized for medium sample through-put with highly reliable and robust read-out and can be performed in two working days.


Introduction
Breast cancer is the most common malignancy in women with approximately 523,000 new cases per year in Europe 1 and 1.9 million incident cases worldwide and the leading cause of cancer deaths in women 2 . Prognostic factors provide information about the future course of the disease. Clinico-3 pathological risk factors for disease recurrence include axillary lymph node status, tumor size, histological grade, steroid hormone receptor status, vascular invasion, patient age, and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-status 3 . According to clinico-pathological risk classification for early breast cancer about 25% of the patients are at high risk, 65% are at intermediate risk and 10% are at low risk for disease recurrence. Patients at high-risk include those with more than three lymph nodes affected (independent from additional risk factors) or patients with one to three affected lymph nodes plus additional risk factors. According to current understanding, the high-risk group also includes patients with triple negative breast cancer (TNBC), i.e. patients with tumors negative for estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR) and HER2 expression 4 . Patients at high risk for disease recurrence are recommended to receive anthracycline-based chemotherapy (ANT) according to international guidelines 5 .
To identify patients at diagnosis whether they will benefit from anthracycline-based chemotherapy, a biomarker to predict response is of clinical need. DNA methylation patterns such as methylation status of the pituitary homeobox gene 2 (PITX2) play a key role in several cancer indications [6][7][8][9][10][11][12] including breast cancer [13][14][15][16][17] and published data of a Research Use Only (RUO) PITX2 DNA methylation assay using fresh-frozen tissue showed that PITX2 DNA methylation can be a predictive marker for response to adjuvant anthracycline-based chemotherapy in breast cancer 18 . The CE-marked therascreen ® PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit by QIAGEN was entering the market in 2018 as clinically validated biomarker test for breast cancer [19][20][21] .
The CE-marked therascreen ® PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit is an optimized in vitro DNA methylation-specific quantitative real-time PCR test intended for the clinically reliable determination of the percent methylation ratio (PMR) in the pituitary homeobox 2 (PITX2) transcription factor gene promoter 2 in lymph node-positive, estrogen receptor-positive and HER2-negative high risk breast cancer patients.
The clinical validity of the pre-defined PMR cut-off of 12 to predict patient outcome to anthracyclinebased chemotherapy with or without endocrine therapy was shown by using 145 patient samples with 10-year follow-up data and disease-free survival as the primary end point. PITX2 hypermethylation (PMR > 12) indicates a poor outcome to ANT-based chemotherapy whereas PITX2 hypomethylation (PMR ≤ 12) indicates a good outcome to ANT-based chemotherapy 20 . The CE-marked therascreen ® PITX2 RGQ PCR assay is able to guide the clinician to select the appropriate chemotherapy regimen for high-risk BC patient group. The CE-marked therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR assay uses bisulfiteconverted genomic DNA (with a genomic DNA input range of 200 ng -1000 ng with 400 ng as recommended input) derived from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tumor tissues of these breast cancer patients. The FFPE tissue surface area of ≥ 100 mm 2 (1-2 x 5 µm sections) is the recommended minimal tissue surface area for the standard therascreen PITX2 workflow 19,22 .
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy before tumor resection is becoming increasingly important in the treatment of high-risk breast cancer [23][24][25] . In these cases, tumor tissue specimens are limited to core biopsies or fine needle aspirates with tumor tissue surface areas below the minimal surface area of 100 mm 2 which are needed for the standard therascreen PITX2 workflow 19 .
The workflow protocol described here as "Condensed Efficient Fast (CEF)" PITX2 workflow combines DNA purification and bisulfite conversion in one step and allows to reduce the minimal tumor tissue surface area to 30 mm 2 from 1-2 x 5 µm FFPE sections (therefore routinely assessed core biopsies or fine needle aspirations may be used as tissue source) to determine the PITX2 PMR with a recommended bisDNA input of 6 ng/µl. The new CEF PITX2 workflow introduces the EpiTect Fast FFPE Bisulfite Kit (Qiagen Cat. No./ID 59844) in the workflow, which consists of the EpiTect Fast FFPE Lysis Kit, containing specialized buffers for efficient deparaffinization and lysis of FFPE tissue slices and the EpiTect Fast DNA Bisulfite Kit for fast and effective bisulfite conversion of the lysate. The DNA quality check is performed after the bisulfite-conversion of gDNA (bisDNA) by photospectrometric assessment (OD260 nm) with the QIAxpert photospectrometer using ssDNA QIAamp plug-in and buffer EB (QIAGEN) as blank control. The workflow steps using the therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR assay to determine the PMR of PITX2 on the Rotor-Gene with automated data analysis and report using Rotor-Gene AssayManager v2.1 remain unchanged and identical outlined in the "PMR Detection & Analysis" part (see Figure 1). For an overview of the CEF PITX2 workflow steps see Table 1.   The CEF PITX2 workflow offers scientists and clinicians a tool to conduct scientific research and   translational research studies on PITX2 as biomarker in indications with small amounts of FFPE tumor tissues not only in breast cancer but also other cancer indications like head and neck cancer 10 , esophageal squamous cell carcinoma 12 , non-small cell lung cancer 6

Reagents
When working with chemicals, always wear a suitable lab coat, disposable gloves, and protective goggles. Make sure that all kit reagents are not used after their expiry date and have been transported and stored under the correct conditions. Tissue specimens should be fixed in 4-10% formalin (neutral buffered formalin is generally accepted) as quickly as possible after surgical removal of the biopsy. Ideally, use a fixation time of 14-24 hrs (longer fixation times lead to more severe DNA fragmentation, resulting in poor performance in qPCR/qMSP assays). Thoroughly dehydrate samples prior to embedding (residual formalin can inhibit proteinase K digestion). Five µm thick sections must be cut from the paraffin block. All chemicals and biological materials are potentially hazardous.
Specimens and samples are potentially infectious and must be treated as biohazardous materials.
Discard samples and assay waste according to your local safety procedures. The entire therascreen PITX2 workflow requires transfer of samples in different tubes, therefore make sure that the traceability of the samples is well maintained at each step.

REAGENTS 6
A list of reagents and consumables to perform this workflow is listed in Table 2.
If not stated otherwise in Table 2, store all buffers and components at room temperature (15-25°C).
An overview of potential hazardous substances used or included in kit constituents and their respective safety actions is presented in Table 3.

Starting material
The starting material for DNA purification is freshly cut histological sections of FFPE tissue, which can be stored overnight at room temperature, if required. Up to two sections of 5 µm (at least 5% tumor content) should be processed for lysis and bisulfite conversion.

·
Before starting an experiment please follow the instructions of the respective kit protocols.

Procedure
For general handling instructions refer to the section Materials, the general working recommendations as well as to the respective kit protocols. Storage conditions are described in Table 2. Regarding safety precautions for specific kit components see Table 3. Timing as stated in the following procedure refers to the simultaneous processing of 24 samples.

1.
Pre-heat a thermomixer or heated orbital incubator to 56°C. If a thermomixer or heated orbital incubator is not available, a heating block or water bath can be used instead.

2.
Using a scalpel, trim excess paraffin off the sample block.

3.
Cut one to two sections (5 µm thick) from a histologically confirmed tumor tissue.
Troubleshooting. Critical step: if the sample surface has been exposed to air, discard the first 2-3 sections.

4.
Immediately place the sections in a 1.5 ml or 2 ml microcentrifuge tube.
Deparaffinization using deparaffinization solution and PK-digestion of FFPE tissue.

7.
Vortex and briefly centrifuge to collect the sample in the bottom of the tube.
Note: The Deparaffinization Solution will form a layer above the Lysis Buffer FTB with the addition of proteinase K.

8.
Incubate the tubes in a thermal block set to 56°C for 60 min up to overnight to lyse the tissues. Ensure that tissues are completely lysed (the solution will become homogeneous). Pause Point: incubation can also take place overnight.
Note: If using only one heating block, leave the sample at room temperature (15-25°C) after the 56°C incubation, until the heating block has reached 90°C.The incubation at 90°C partially reverses formaldehyde modification of nucleic acids. Longer incubation times or higher incubation temperatures may result in more fragmented DNA. Troubleshooting.

10.
Briefly centrifuge the 1.5 ml tube to remove drops from inside the lid.

11.
Transfer the complete lysate (about 40 µl, the lower clear phase) in a 200 µl reaction tube or 8well strip (not provided). Avoid transfer of Deparaffinization Solution as much as possible.
Note: Small amounts of remaining Deparaffinization Solution have no effect on the bisulfite reaction.

12.
Prepare the bisulfite reactions in 200 µl PCR tubes (not provided). Add each component in the order listed in Table 5. Note: Critical step: when using the therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit, the "Low concentration" protocol from the EpiTect Fast Bisulfite Conversion Handbook must always be used, as the concentration of gDNA purified from FFPE samples is usually low.
Critical step: the bisulfite mix should be immediately vortexed for 5 sec after adding the DNA Protect Buffer (caution: reproductive toxicity, irritant) to protect samples from degradation. Troubleshooting.

13.
Close the PCR tubes and mix immediately the bisulfite reactions thoroughly. Store the tubes at room temperature (15-25°C).
Critical step: DNA Protect Buffer should turn from green to blue after addition to the DNA-Bisulfite Solution mixture, indicating sufficient mixing and correct pH for the bisulfite conversion reaction, or DNA binding to the MinElute DNA spin column. Troubleshooting.

14.
Perform the bisulfite DNA conversion using a thermal cycler. Program the thermal cycler according to Table 6. The complete cycle should take ~30 min. If using a thermal cycler that does not allow to enter the reaction volume (140 µl), set the instrument to the largest volume setting available.

15.
Place the PCR tubes containing the bisulfite reactions into the thermal cycler. Start the thermal cycling incubation.
Critical step: as the bisulfite reaction is not overlaid with mineral oil, only thermal cyclers with heated lids are suitable for this procedure. It is important to use PCR tubes that close tightly.
Pause Point: converted DNA can be left in the thermal cycler overnight (at 20°C) without any loss of qPCR assay performance.

16.
Briefly centrifuge the PCR tubes containing the bisulfite reactions. Then transfer the complete bisulfite reactions to clean 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tubes.

17.
Add 310 µl Buffer BL (Caution: harmful) to each sample. Mix the solution by vortexing and then centrifuge briefly.

18.
Add 250 µl ethanol (96-100 %) to each sample. Mix the solutions by pulse vortexing for 15 sec and centrifuge briefly to remove the drops from inside the lid.

19.
Transfer the entire mixture from each tube into the corresponding MinElute DNA spin column.

20.
Centrifuge the spin columns at maximum speed for 1 min. Discard the flow-through and place the spin columns back into the collection tubes.

21.
Add 500 µl Buffer BW (wash buffer) to each spin column, and centrifuge at maximum speed for 1 min. Discard the flow-through and place the spin columns back into the collection tubes.

22.
Add 500 µl Buffer BD (desulfonation buffer) to each spin column and incubate for 15 min at Note: it is important to close the lids of the spin columns before incubation. Troubleshooting.

23.
Centrifuge the spin columns at maximum speed for 1 min. Discard the flow-through and place the spin columns back into the collection tubes.

24.
Add 500 µl Buffer BW to each spin column and centrifuge at maximum speed for 1 min.
Discard the flow-through and place the spin columns back into the collection tubes.

25.
Add 500 µl Buffer BW a second time to each spin column and centrifuge at maximum speed for 1 min. Discard the flow-through and place the spin columns back into the collection tube.

27.
Place the spin columns into new 2 ml collection tubes and centrifuge the spin columns at maximum speed for 1 min to remove any residual liquid. 13

28.
Place the spin columns with open lids into a clean 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tube (not provided) and incubate the columns for 5 min at 60°C in a heating block.
Critical step: this step ensures the evaporation of any remaining liquid.

29.
Add 15 µl Buffer EB (elution buffer) directly onto the center of each spin-column membrane and close the lids gently.
Critical step: do not elute with less than 15 µl buffer as the eluate volume would be too small to proceed with the qPCR step.

30.
Incubate the spin columns at room temperature for 1 min.

31.
Centrifuge for 1 min at 15,000 x g (12,000 rpm) to elute the DNA.
Pause point: we recommend storing purified DNA at 2-8°C for up to 24 hrs. When storing purified DNA for longer than 24 hrs, we recommend storage at -30 to -15°C.

32.
The concentration of DNA is determined by measuring absorbance at 260 nm following the

33.
Cool a Loading Block 72 x 0.1 ml tubes for 10 min in a deep-freezer or for at least 1 hr at refrigerator temperature.

34.
Thaw all therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit components and samples in a refrigerator, on ice, on a cooling block or at room temperature for as long as necessary.

35.
Place the thawed products on ice, on a cooling block or in the refrigerator until placing them back into -30 to -15°C after use.
Note: therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit components can be kept at 2-8°C and protected from light for a maximum of 6 hr if used several times the same day.

36.
Vortex the tubes (10-12 sec), then centrifuge them briefly before use. Except PITX2 RGQ PCR MMx, which is mixed by pipetting up and down as it contains Taq Polymerase.

37.
Prepare PITX2 qPCR reaction mix on ice (or using a cooling block) in a 1.5 ml or 2 ml tube according to the number of samples to be processed.
The pipetting scheme for the preparation of the PITX2 reaction mix, shown in Table 7, is calculated to achieve final reaction volumes of 20 µl after addition of 4 µl bisDNA sample or control. Extra volume is included to compensate for pipetting errors and to allow preparation of sufficient reaction mix for four samples tested in duplicate, plus four controls. If less samples are tested, the reaction mix can be prepared accordingly. Remember to allow for the extra volume to compensate for pipetting errors (one extra well for up to 10 wells and two extra wells for up to 20 wells). Troubleshooting.

40.
Add 4 µl sample or control material into its corresponding tube according to the setup in Figure   2 to obtain a total volume of 20 µl. Mix gently 5 times by pipetting up and down. Note: be careful to change tips between each tube to avoid false-positive results from contamination by any nonspecific template. Troubleshooting.

41.
Close all tubes and check that no bubbles are present at the bottom of the tubes. Troubleshooting.

42.
Return all the therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit components and samples to the appropriate storage conditions to avoid any material degradation. Pause point: it is highly recommended to start the run as soon as possible after the preparation, however, if the tubes are prepared but cannot be processed directly (e.g. due to instrument unavailability), it is possible to store the plate at 2-8°C and protected from light up to 24 hrs. Troubleshooting.

43.
Place a 72-Well Rotor on the Rotor-Gene Q MDx rotor holder.

45.
Fill empty positions with empty, closed tubes to fill the rotor entirely.

47.
Load the Rotor-Gene Q MDx instrument with the rotor and locking ring. Close the instrument lid.
Creating a work list and starting the qPCR run

48.
Switch on the Rotor-Gene Q MDx instrument.

49.
Open the Rotor-Gene AssayManager software by clicking the icon: The Rotor-Gene AssayManager window opens (Figure 3).

50.
Log in as a user with the "Operator" role in the closed mode. Click "OK". The Rotor-Gene AssayManager screen opens (Figure 4).

51.
Check that the RGQ is correctly detected to the software before launching the run.

52.
Select the "Setup" tab. Note: The overall functionalities of the Setup environment and of "Creating/Editing a Work List" are described in the Rotor-Gene AssayManager v2.1 Core Application User Manual.

54.
Select the PITX2 assay profile from the list of available assay profiles ( Figure 5).

55.
Transfer the selected assay profile to the list of selected assay profiles by clicking on the arrow (to the right of the assay profile name). The assay profile should now be displayed in the selected assay profiles list ( Figure 5).

56.
In the "Assays" tab, complete the yellow fields: number of samples in accordance with your plate setup ( Figure 6). Note: the number of samples does not correspond to the number of wells and does not include controls. Samples are tested in duplicates; therefore, one sample corresponds to two wells. For example, the number of samples to be inserted is 4 for the plate of 12 wells presented in Figure 2.

57.
Select the "Kit Information" tab. Insert the kit information by either selecting "Use kit bar code" (and scan the bar code) or selecting "Enter kit information manually" and inserting manually the kit information found on the label of the therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit box:

58.
Select the "Samples" tab. A list with the sample details is shown. This list represents the expected layout of the rotor.

59.
Enter the sample identification as well as any optional sample information as a comment for each sample (Figure 7).

62.
Save the work list (Figure 8; "c"). Optional: press "Print work list" to print the work list. Printing the work list may help with the preparation and setup of the run. The sample details are included as part of the work list.

63.
Select the corresponding work list from the work list manager and click "Apply" (Figure 8; "d").
Alternatively, if the work list is still open, click "Apply". Note: check that the Rotor-Gene Q MDx is correctly detected by the software before launching the run.

64.
Enter the experiment name.

65.
Select the cycler to be used in "Cycler Selection".

66.
Check that the locking ring is correctly attached and confirm on the screen that the locking ring is attached.

Release and report qPCR results
The general functionality of the approval environment is described in the Rotor-Gene AssayManager v2.1 Gamma Plug-in User Manual. After a run has been finished and the cycler has been released, the experiment will be saved in the internal database. The analysis of the acquired data is performed automatically according to the rules and parameter values defined by the assay profile.

68.
When the run has finished, click on "Finish run" to analyze and export data. Critical step: until this step is completed, the experiment is not saved in the internal database.

69.
After clicking "Finish run", enter the password and click "Release and go to approval" ( Figure   9). · For users logged in with the "Approver" role, click "Release and go to approval". · For users logged in with the "Operator" role, click "Release".
· If "Release and go to approval" was clicked, the results for the experiment are displayed in the "Approval" environment.
· If "Release" was clicked by a user with the "Operator" role, someone with an "Approver" role must log in and select the "Approval" environment. Note: in the "Approval" tab, experiments can be analyzed by shifting between each tab (i.e., experiment, assay, audit, trail, run control results).

70.
Check the amplification curves for each sample, tick the first box on the right side of the "flags" column (the box becomes green) ( Figure 10). Troubleshooting.

71.
Click "Release/report data" (at the bottom right of the window) to create a .pdf report and to save the LIMS file. A copy is automatically saved in the following location: C:\Documentsandsettings\AllUsers\Documents\QIAGEN\RotorGeneAssayManager\Export\Reports.

72.
Close the pdf file and return to the Rotor-Gene AssayManager. Click "OK" each time it is asked.
Note: the software automatically generated a LIMS file in the following location: C:\Documents and settings\All Users\Documents\QIAGEN\RotorGeneAssayManager\Export\LIMS

75.
Unload the Rotor-Gene Q MDx instrument and discard the strip tubes according to your local safety regulations.

Troubleshooting
Analysis of the therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit results for each control and sample is performed automatically by the Rotor-Gene AssayManager v2.1 associated with the Gamma Plug-in v1.0 and the PITX2 assay profile hereafter referred to as the PITX2 Assay Package. The PITX2 Assay Package analyzes amplification curves, and may invalidate non-conforming curves, depending on their shape and noise amplitude. If this is the case, a flag will appear with the invalidated curve. Cycle threshold values (CT) are determined automatically for each marker separately by the software.
PMR values for each well are calculated separately using a modified 2exp DCT method with the following formula: PMR (sample): 1/(1+2exp(CT meth (FAM) -CT unmeth (HEX))) 19 . A mean value is determined (PMRmean) and the difference for the PMRs from technical duplicates of a sample is calculated for quality control of intra-assay variation (deltaPMR; see Table 9). To determine assay validity, the PITX2 Assay Package also analyzes the run controls, i.e., PITX2 RGQ PCR Reference 50 (REF50), PITX2 RGQ PCR Reference Low (REFlow), PITX2 RGQ PCR Negative Control (NC) and PITX2 RGQ PCR NTC (NTC). Validity for each control and sample is based on compliance of CT and/or PMR values with pre-defined specifications (see Table 10).
Note: If at least one control is invalid, the results obtained for all test samples are considered invalid and no PMR results are displayed. Finally, an integer PMR value is assigned to the samples by averaging of the two PMR results obtained for each sample replicate. In case of invalid results, retests are required. If the assay is invalid, i.e., one of the four controls invalid, the entire run including all tested samples should be retested. If the assay is valid but one or several samples are invalid, the invalid sample(s) should be retested after investigating the type of failure. A workflow of the retest procedure is presented in Figure 12.

Time Taken
Timings for each step are listed in the procedure section.

therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR kit -Standard PITX2 workflow
The therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit with its so-called 'standard' PITX2 workflow was validated and 20 launched as CE-marked IVD Kit for high risk ER+, HER2-and nodal positive breast cancer patients with adjuvant anthracycline containing chemotherapy. The PITX2 Percent Methylation Ratio (PMR) obtained for each patient tumor tissue sample (≥100 m 2 surface area form 1-2 x 5µm sections; genomic DNA input 200-1000 ng with recommended input of 400 ng and LOD of 4) provides information to the treating physician about whether a patient is likely to benefit from anthracyclinebased chemotherapy. If the PMR obtained is equal to or lower than 12, the patient is likely to benefit from anthracycline-based chemotherapy. In contrast, if the PMR obtained is higher than 12, an alternative treatment may be proposed, because the patient has a lower probability of responding to anthracycline-based chemotherapy 20 .

Condensed Efficient Fast (CEF) PITX2 workflow applications
The primary objective was to assess if the CEF PITX2 workflow allows a reduction of DNA input. A reduction of DNA input is required to expand the Intended Use of the standard workflow with therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit to core biopsy samples or tumor tissues below 100 mm 2 not only in breast cancer, but potentially also in other cancer indications.

Comparison of the new CEF PITX2 workflow with standard therascreen PITX2 workflow
To compare the new CEF workflow with the standard workflow, an exploratory study was performed Linear regression analysis for PMR value comparison between standard and CEF workflow.

21
The correlation between PMR values (n=100) derived from standard therascreen PITX2 and CEF PITX2 workflow were assessed with linear regression analysis.
The PMR values of PITX2 methylation derived from CEF workflow and standard workflow showed a high correlation with a regression coefficient of r=0.87 (r 2 =0.7586). The study acceptance criteria for the linear regression analysis (r ≥ 0.7) was outreached with the regression coefficient of r = 0.87 ( Figure 13).

Determination of amplifiable copy numbers obtained with the new CEF PITX2 workflow
The amplifiable copy number is calculated by using REF50 as reference which contains 1000 methylated and 1000 unmethylated copies by the formula: 2^-deltaCt: copies (sample; meth or unmeth)=1000/2^(CTsample -CTREF50).
The total amplifiable copy number equals the sum of methylated and unmethylated amplified copies.
The copy numbers of the 100 samples tested ranged from 80 to 145,411 copies amplified ( Figure 14).
In 100% of samples more than 50 copies (equals a calculated LOD of 4) were detected. 98% of samples had more than 100 copies (equals a calculated LOD of 2), 96% of samples had more than 250 copies (equals a calculated LOD of 0.8) and 94% of samples (equals a calculated LOD of 0.4) had more than 500 copies (Table 11).
The study acceptance criteria for the CEF PITX2 workflow (90% of samples with ≥ 50 amplifiable copies) was reached with 100% of samples. The results also show a potential of reducing the LOD from 4 to 1-2 at a minimal tissue surface area of ≥ 100 mm 2 .  The second objective for the optimal DNA input was based on the criteria of FTSPR ≥ 90%. Table 13 summarizes the results of the FTSPR achieved based on testing at each DNA input concentration 30 to 50 samples. The predetermined threshold of FTSPR ≥ 90% was only achieved at 6 ng/ml. Therefore, these data define 6 ng/µl bisDNA input as the "recommended input" for the new PITX2 CEF workflow. Lower bisDNA concentrations down to 2 ng/µl may be possible as "minimal input" but associated with a higher sample invalidity rate.
The total amplifiable copy number equals the sum of methylated and unmethylated amplified copies.
The copy numbers were calculated for the bisDNA concentrations obtained at 2-6 ng/ml DNA input. Concentrations below the recommended bisDNA input of 6 ng/µl showed a minimum of amplifiable copies below 50 and an average between 113 to 228 for 2-4 ng/µl bisDNA, respectively. For the recommended bisDNA input of 6 ng/µl, the achieved amplifiable copy number was at minimum 62 and at average 373 which is sufficient to reach a FTSPR of 92%.

Calculation of recommended tissue surface area (mm 2 ) for CEF PITX2 workflow
The tissue surface area (mm 2 ) was calculated according to the ratio of dilution (6 ng/µl) to the original undiluted bisDNA concentration of the study group (n=46) extrapolated to the whole tissue surface area (mm 2 ) for valid samples. Tumor tissue surface area was determined from scans of Haematoxilin-Eosine stained sections on slides with the Hamamatsu Nanozoomer virtual microscope using the freehand region tool of the NDP.view software version 2. One sample was omitted from 46 valid samples due to missing tissue surface area information which resulted in n=45 samples for data analysis (Table 15).
The calculated tissue surface area ranges from 3.1 to 42.9 mm 2 with an average of 12.5 mm 2 (Table   15 A).
The minimal calculated tissue surface area to reach ≥ 90% sample validity is 30 mm 2 (Table 15 B) which is 3.3 times lower than the recommended tissue surface of 100 mm 2 for the standard therascreen PITX2 workflow.
With a recommended input of 6 ng/µl bisDNA for qPCR analysis, the required tissue surface area is reduced by 3.3-fold, reducing the surface area from 100 mm 2 (standard PITX2 workflow) to about 30 mm 2 (CEF PITX2 workflow).
Therefore, the new CEF PITX2 workflow facilitates to determine PMR from tumor core biopsies (on average between 20-40 mm 2 per FFPE tissue section) from 1-2 x 5 µm sections.
The recommended DNA input is decreased by 4.5-fold with the new CEF PITX2 workflow compared to the standard therascreen PITX2 workflow. Table 16 highlights the specifications of the standard and 24 CEF workflow. Loading block setup for an experiment with the therascreen PITX2 RGQ PCR Kit, testing four samples.
29 Figure 4 Description of the different tabs present in the RGAM software.
30 Figure 5 Assay profile import. Creation of the worklist.
32 Figure 9 Finalization of the run.
33 Figure 11 Export of the run data.