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  • fh_fingolfin
    Junior Member
    • Nov 2012
    • 6

    Entire TCGA mutation collection

    Hi all,

    I'm a bit lost with TCGA. We are trying to make a global analysis of mutations in genes in cancers categorized per tissue type / cancer type. We thought about utilizing the TCGA data for this, so what I'd basically need is a global maf-file based on the entire TCGA data. However, it appears to me that there is no such file apparently available. I checked the TCGA data portal, but it seems it only lets you query cancer types one by one and then you still have to search for appropriate maf-files. Now I have come across Broad's Firehose portal, where they have a maf-file Dashboard which appears to be regularly updated. They list maf-files from several centers per cancer type, but also sometimes several files from the same center for a single cancer type. Does anyone know if the files listed there should in principal contain all TCGA mutations and I would get a global mutations file by simply combining (and removing duplicates) the maf-files from the Firehose MAF dashboard?

    I take it, there is no other data source already containing all TCGA mutations like COSMIC?

    Any feedback would be greatly appreciated - thanks!
  • fh_fingolfin
    Junior Member
    • Nov 2012
    • 6

    #2
    Bump - anyone?

    Comment

    • Richard Finney
      Senior Member
      • Feb 2009
      • 701

      #3
      Anybody that can find and link to an official statement or an unofficial explanation on the status and quality of TCGA VCF and MAF file would be doing many a favor.


      I suspect the methods of generating these files and the final quality vary greatly.

      Comment

      • Jessica_L
        Senior Member
        • Feb 2010
        • 117

        #4
        I've been a bit lost when working with TCGA myself. As far as I can tell there isn't a global maf file, either.

        It's my understanding that the Broad firehose data is built to both analyze and catalog analyses of TCGA data, so if I understand all of their About statements correctly, that means if you download the files from firehose and remove duplicates, you should have everything covered by TCGA.

        Comment

        • fh_fingolfin
          Junior Member
          • Nov 2012
          • 6

          #5
          Thanks for the feedback. So it seems the whole TCGA project is quite a mess regarding data-presentation which is a pity. The COSMIC portal in contrast is neatly organized I find. I wonder why can't they do something similar - in the current state it's just a pain.

          So it seems the conclusion so far is that downloading everything you can grab from Firehose, merging and removing duplicates seems to be the only feasible way to get a general TCGA mutations list. I'll go with that for now, but if anyone knows a better solution, let me and others know - I can't be the only one asking these questions.

          Comment

          • mjn138
            Junior Member
            • Apr 2011
            • 3

            #6
            OncoLand/cBioPortal

            There are a number of paid tools out there that have attempted to remedy the situation (by cleaning up the data, etc.). OncoLand, from Omicsoft, is one: http://www.omicsoft.com/oncoland-service, as well as free tools from cBioPortal (www.cbioportal.org).

            Comment

            • temizna
              Junior Member
              • Jan 2013
              • 1

              #7
              As far as I know there is no global mac file for TCGA. cbioportal also only allows one cancer at a time download.

              Why would you need a global file? You can download all the level3 maf files for all the available cancers and load them one by one or combine them by tissue later yourself.

              When I work with TCGA mutation landscapes, I generally load one cancer type, analyze its mutation landscape save the results and move on to next one.
              After this initial analysis is done I can then compare various cancers be it by type, tissue, sex whatever you can think of.

              HTH,
              Alpay

              Comment

              • fh_fingolfin
                Junior Member
                • Nov 2012
                • 6

                #8
                Yeah seems cBioPortal only allows downloading a single cancer type and also only mutations for a subset of genes.

                I'd need a global file just to avoid the hassle of searching for each cancer type, download its maf files and analyze/join the results. Having a global file is just way more convenient and apart from file size I don't see a particular advantage of doing it sequentially cancer by cancer.

                Comment

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