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Pan-cancer whole-genome analyses of metastatic solid tumours.

Authors :
Priestley, Peter
Baber, Jonathan
Lolkema, Martijn P.
Steeghs, Neeltje
de Bruijn, Ewart
Shale, Charles
Duyvesteyn, Korneel
Haidari, Susan
van Hoeck, Arne
Onstenk, Wendy
Roepman, Paul
Voda, Mircea
Bloemendal, Haiko J.
Tjan-Heijnen, Vivianne C. G.
van Herpen, Carla M. L.
Labots, Mariette
Witteveen, Petronella O.
Smit, Egbert F.
Sleijfer, Stefan
Voest, Emile E.
Source :
Nature; 11/7/2019, Vol. 575 Issue 7781, p210-216, 7p, 16 Graphs
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Metastatic cancer is a major cause of death and is associated with poor treatment efficacy. A better understanding of the characteristics of late-stage cancer is required to help adapt personalized treatments, reduce overtreatment and improve outcomes. Here we describe the largest, to our knowledge, pan-cancer study of metastatic solid tumour genomes, including whole-genome sequencing data for 2,520 pairs of tumour and normal tissue, analysed at median depths of 106× and 38×, respectively, and surveying more than 70 million somatic variants. The characteristic mutations of metastatic lesions varied widely, with mutations that reflect those of the primary tumour types, and with high rates of whole-genome duplication events (56%). Individual metastatic lesions were relatively homogeneous, with the vast majority (96%) of driver mutations being clonal and up to 80% of tumour-suppressor genes being inactivated bi-allelically by different mutational mechanisms. Although metastatic tumour genomes showed similar mutational landscape and driver genes to primary tumours, we find characteristics that could contribute to responsiveness to therapy or resistance in individual patients. We implement an approach for the review of clinically relevant associations and their potential for actionability. For 62% of patients, we identify genetic variants that may be used to stratify patients towards therapies that either have been approved or are in clinical trials. This demonstrates the importance of comprehensive genomic tumour profiling for precision medicine in cancer. The mutational landscape of metastatic cancer genomes is analysed in a large-scale, pan-cancer study of metastatic solid tumours that includes whole-genome sequencing of 2,520 tumour–normal tissue pairs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
575
Issue :
7781
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139525494
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1689-y