Cancer is a major cause of death worldwide. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has dramatically increased the sequencing data output and transformed biomedical investigations. NGS enables the generations of genetic data specific to patients from tumor tissue samples so that targeted therapies can be used. The obtained data further allows the prioritization of effective therapies based on the tumor-specific genotype. Practitioners in the field of clinical genomics can make the best use of testing facilities while lessening the possible off-targets by choosing a priori gene set. Therefore, targeted sequencing has arisen as a more affordable technique for the genomic profiling of tumors. Drug resistance is commonly observed in cancer because of mutations. Thus, precise genetic and molecular profiling of tumors ought to be routinely done prior to the use of targeted therapy or precision cancer therapy. NGS already has the capacity to ameliorate genetic screening in families with previous histories of the high occurrence of various cancer-associated genes, including