The MIQE Revolution: implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative PCR studies

<p>The discovery of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) a few decades ago initiated a global impact on the entirety of the medical and life sciences research spheres. Nowadays, essentially all laboratories focusing on such vital research employ in-house PCR techniques on a near-daily basis, du...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Duncan Ayers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IJCTO 2014-03-01
Series:International Journal of Cancer Therapy and Oncology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ijcto.org/index.php/IJCTO/article/view/66
id doaj-f31aa9a4d1af4bba89381d403bb994d5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f31aa9a4d1af4bba89381d403bb994d52020-11-24T22:55:56ZengIJCTOInternational Journal of Cancer Therapy and Oncology 2330-40492014-03-012210.14319/ijcto.0202.656The MIQE Revolution: implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative PCR studiesDuncan Ayers0Department of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine & Surgery, University of Malta, Msida, Malta. Faculty of Medical & Human Sciences, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.<p>The discovery of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) a few decades ago initiated a global impact on the entirety of the medical and life sciences research spheres. Nowadays, essentially all laboratories focusing on such vital research employ in-house PCR techniques on a near-daily basis, due to the wide spectrum of applications which PCR technology can adopt itself to. Unfortunately, ubiquitously available and affordable technologies, such as RT-qPCR, do have a major passive drawback: inter-laboratory reproducibility. Variations in the routine methodologies implemented by individual laboratories can inevitably lead to severe lapse of data robustness and reliability for publication in peer-reviewed journals. In order to address this pressing issue, a consortium of eminent research group leaders in the field of RT-qPCR technology decided to propose a distinct set of standardized guidelines for the reporting of RT-qPCR study results, known as the Minimum Information for Publication of Quantitative Real Time PCR Experiments (MIQE), which were published in early 2009.<sup>2</sup> This concept is very much similar to the one leading to the development of the Minimum Information for Microarray Experimets (MIAME) guidelines for reporting of microarray-based studies. In order to address this pressing issue, a consortium of eminent research group leaders in the field of RT-qPCR technology decided to propose a distinct set of standardized guidelines for the reporting of RT-qPCR study results, known as the Minimum Information for Publication of Quantitative Real Time PCR Experiments (MIQE), which were published in early 2009. This concept is very much similar to the one leading to the development of the Minimum Information for Microarray Experimets (MIAME) guidelines for reporting of microarray-based studies.</p><p>-------------------</p><p><strong>Cite this article as:</strong> Ayers D. The MIQE Revolution: Implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative PCR studies. Int J Cancer Ther Oncol 2014; 2(2):02026. <strong>DOI: 10.14319/ijcto.0202.6</strong></p>http://ijcto.org/index.php/IJCTO/article/view/66qPCRMIQEGuidelinesStandardisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Duncan Ayers
spellingShingle Duncan Ayers
The MIQE Revolution: implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative PCR studies
International Journal of Cancer Therapy and Oncology
qPCR
MIQE
Guidelines
Standardisation
author_facet Duncan Ayers
author_sort Duncan Ayers
title The MIQE Revolution: implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative PCR studies
title_short The MIQE Revolution: implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative PCR studies
title_full The MIQE Revolution: implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative PCR studies
title_fullStr The MIQE Revolution: implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative PCR studies
title_full_unstemmed The MIQE Revolution: implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative PCR studies
title_sort miqe revolution: implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative pcr studies
publisher IJCTO
series International Journal of Cancer Therapy and Oncology
issn 2330-4049
publishDate 2014-03-01
description <p>The discovery of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) a few decades ago initiated a global impact on the entirety of the medical and life sciences research spheres. Nowadays, essentially all laboratories focusing on such vital research employ in-house PCR techniques on a near-daily basis, due to the wide spectrum of applications which PCR technology can adopt itself to. Unfortunately, ubiquitously available and affordable technologies, such as RT-qPCR, do have a major passive drawback: inter-laboratory reproducibility. Variations in the routine methodologies implemented by individual laboratories can inevitably lead to severe lapse of data robustness and reliability for publication in peer-reviewed journals. In order to address this pressing issue, a consortium of eminent research group leaders in the field of RT-qPCR technology decided to propose a distinct set of standardized guidelines for the reporting of RT-qPCR study results, known as the Minimum Information for Publication of Quantitative Real Time PCR Experiments (MIQE), which were published in early 2009.<sup>2</sup> This concept is very much similar to the one leading to the development of the Minimum Information for Microarray Experimets (MIAME) guidelines for reporting of microarray-based studies. In order to address this pressing issue, a consortium of eminent research group leaders in the field of RT-qPCR technology decided to propose a distinct set of standardized guidelines for the reporting of RT-qPCR study results, known as the Minimum Information for Publication of Quantitative Real Time PCR Experiments (MIQE), which were published in early 2009. This concept is very much similar to the one leading to the development of the Minimum Information for Microarray Experimets (MIAME) guidelines for reporting of microarray-based studies.</p><p>-------------------</p><p><strong>Cite this article as:</strong> Ayers D. The MIQE Revolution: Implementation of standards for the reporting of quantitative PCR studies. Int J Cancer Ther Oncol 2014; 2(2):02026. <strong>DOI: 10.14319/ijcto.0202.6</strong></p>
topic qPCR
MIQE
Guidelines
Standardisation
url http://ijcto.org/index.php/IJCTO/article/view/66
work_keys_str_mv AT duncanayers themiqerevolutionimplementationofstandardsforthereportingofquantitativepcrstudies
AT duncanayers miqerevolutionimplementationofstandardsforthereportingofquantitativepcrstudies
_version_ 1725655694763360256