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Bone biopsy protocol for advanced prostate cancer in the era of precision medicine

Authors :
Himisha Beltran
Bradley B. Pua
Brian D. Robinson
Juan Miguel Mosquera
Luis S Beltran
Olivier Elemento
David M. Nanus
Marc H. Schiffman
Andrea Sboner
Mark A. Rubin
Adam D. Talenfeld
Chantal Pauli
Alexandros Sigaras
Rohan Bareja
Verena Sailer
Kyungmouk Steve Lee
Brian L. Sullivan
Rema Rao
Scott T. Tagawa
Joanna Cyrta
Myriam Kossai
Shaham Beg
Kenneth Eng
Source :
Cancer. 124:1008-1015
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Wiley, 2017.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Metastatic biopsies are increasingly being performed in patients with advanced prostate cancer to search for actionable targets and/or to identify emerging resistance mechanisms. Due to a predominance of bone metastases and their sclerotic nature, obtaining sufficient tissue for clinical and genomic studies is challenging. METHODS Patients with prostate cancer bone metastases were enrolled between February 2013 and March 2017 on an institutional review board-approved protocol for prospective image-guided bone biopsy. Bone biopsies and blood clots were collected fresh. Compact bone was subjected to formalin with a decalcifying agent for diagnosis; bone marrow and blood clots were frozen in optimum cutting temperature formulation for next-generation sequencing. Frozen slides were cut from optimum cutting temperature cryomolds and evaluated for tumor histology and purity. Tissue was macrodissected for DNA and RNA extraction, and whole-exome sequencing and RNA sequencing were performed. RESULTS Seventy bone biopsies from 64 patients were performed. Diagnostic material confirming prostate cancer was successful in 60 of 70 cases (85.7%). The median DNA/RNA yield was 25.5 ng/μL and 16.2 ng/μL, respectively. Whole-exome sequencing was performed successfully in 49 of 60 cases (81.7%), with additional RNA sequencing performed in 20 of 60 cases (33.3%). Recurrent alterations were as expected, including those involving the AR, PTEN, TP53, BRCA2, and SPOP genes. CONCLUSIONS This prostate cancer bone biopsy protocol ensures a valuable source for high-quality DNA and RNA for tumor sequencing and may be used to detect actionable alterations and resistance mechanisms in patients with bone metastases. Cancer 2017. © 2017 American Cancer Society.

Details

ISSN :
10970142 and 0008543X
Volume :
124
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3f67cb973ee518a037653b5a86134141