ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION: Laboratory testing for the presence of the V617F mutation in JAK2 has taken on great importance in the diagnosis of myeloproliferative disorders. The availability of a facile detection method would bring this testing into greater clinical use. The polymerase chain reaction coupled with restriction fragment length polymorphisms is such a facile method. BsaXI cleaves the normal sequence but does not cleave the sequence leading to the V617F mutation. METHODS: We have examined the use of selective PCR reamplification with BsaXI cleavage to enrich the fraction of V617F and compared the assignment of mutation with an established qPCR method. RESULTS: We found that BsaXI fails to completely cleave normal sequence PCR product, leading to false positivity, particularly at low mutation levels. We also found that first-round standard PCR introduces new mutations in which subsequent reamplification and digestion cannot distinguish from the V617F mutation. CONCLUSION: This combination of problems effectively combines to render selective reamplification and redigestion unsuitable for detecting low fractions of the V617F mutation.