Subclonal diversification of primary breast cancer revealed by multiregion sequencing

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The sequencing of cancer genomes may enable tailoring of therapeutics to the underlying biological abnormalities driving a particular patient's tumor. However, sequencing-based strategies rely heavily on representative sampling of tumors. To understand the subclonal structure of primary breast cancer, we applied whole-genome and targeted sequencing to multiple samples from each of 50 patients' tumors (303 samples in total). The extent of subclonal diversification varied among cases and followed spatial patterns. No strict temporal order was evident, with point mutations and rearrangements affecting the most common breast cancer genes, including PIK3CA, TP53, PTEN, BRCA2 and MYC, occurring early in some tumors and late in others. In 13 out of 50 cancers, potentially targetable mutations were subclonal. Landmarks of disease progression, such as resistance to chemotherapy and the acquisition of invasive or metastatic potential, arose within detectable subclones of antecedent lesions. These findings highlight the importance of including analyses of subclonal structure and tumor evolution in clinical trials of primary breast cancer.
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Issue Date
2015-07
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

COPY-NUMBER ALTERATION; TUMOR TYPES; INTRATUMOR HETEROGENEITY; MUTATIONAL PROCESSES; MOLECULAR PORTRAITS; PANCREATIC-CANCER; DRIVER MUTATIONS; PROSTATE-CANCER; CLINICAL-TRIALS; EVOLUTION

Citation

NATURE MEDICINE, v.21, no.7, pp.751 - 759

ISSN
1078-8956
DOI
10.1038/nm.3886
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/207014
Appears in Collection
MSE-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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