What is Loss of Heterozygosity (LOH)?
Normally, there are 2 copies of every gene in a person’s DNA (excluding sex chromosomes in males)
When the copies are not identical, the person is considered heterozygous at that gene location
In cancer, DNA damage events can occur in the cell that causes the loss of one copy
In the second example shown here, the cell has lost copy B and, therefore, is no longer heterozygous at this location.
LOH can occur at the single-gene level or genome wide – which is called Genomic LOH
Single-gene level: In a person heterozygous for a tumor suppressor gene (one functional copy and one disabled copy), the loss of the functional copy can lead to cancer, as the person no longer has a working version of the tumor suppressor.
Genome-wide: When a person has lost a critical gene involved in DNA repair, chromosome deletions can appear throughout the genome, resulting in LOH at thousands of locations. Even if the DNA repair gene alteration is missed in testing, the detection of genomic LOH can identify a tumor that may be susceptible to drugs that impact the DNA-damage/repair pathway (PARP inhibitors or platinum agents).
The Caris assay measures genomic LOH in order to identify cases of potential homologous recombination deficiency that are not identified with standard NGS.
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