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The Molecular Taxonomy of Primary Prostate Cancer

Authors :
Abeshouse, A
Ahn, J
Akbani, R
Ally, A
Amin, S
Andry, CD
Annala, M
Aprikian, A
Armenia, J
Arora, A
Auman, JT
Balasundaram, M
Balu, S
Barbieri, CE
Bauer, T
Benz, CC
Bergeron, A
Beroukhim, R
Berrios, M
Bivol, A
Bodenheimer, T
Boice, L
Bootwalla, MS
Borges Dos Reis, R
Boutros, PC
Bowen, J
Bowlby, R
Boyd, J
Bradley, RK
Breggia, A
Brimo, F
Bristow, CA
Brooks, D
Broom, BM
Bryce, AH
Bubley, G
Burks, E
Butterfield, YSN
Button, M
Canes, D
Carlotti, CG
Carlsen, R
Carmel, M
Carroll, PR
Carter, SL
Cartun, R
Carver, BS
Chan, JM
Chang, MT
Chen, Y
Cherniack, AD
Chevalier, S
Chin, L
Cho, J
Chu, A
Chuah, E
Chudamani, S
Cibulskis, K
Ciriello, G
Clarke, A
Cooperberg, MR
Corcoran, NM
Costello, AJ
Cowan, J
Crain, D
Curley, E
David, K
Demchok, JA
Demichelis, F
Dhalla, N
Dhir, R
Doueik, A
Drake, B
Dvinge, H
Dyakova, N
Felau, I
Ferguson, ML
Frazer, S
Freedland, S
Fu, Y
Gabriel, SB
Gao, J
Gardner, J
Gastier-Foster, JM
Gehlenborg, N
Gerken, M
Gerstein, MB
Getz, G
Godwin, AK
Gopalan, A
Graefen, M
Graim, K
Gribbin, T
Guin, R
Gupta, M
Hadjipanayis, A
Haider, S
Hamel, L
Hayes, DN
Heiman, DI
Source :
Abeshouse, A; Ahn, J; Akbani, R; Ally, A; Amin, S; Andry, CD; et al.(2015). The Molecular Taxonomy of Primary Prostate Cancer. Cell, 163(4), 1011-1025. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.10.025. UC San Francisco: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6wr0q3b4
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2015.

Abstract

© 2015 Elsevier Inc. Summary There is substantial heterogeneity among primary prostate cancers, evident in the spectrum of molecular abnormalities and its variable clinical course. As part of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), we present a comprehensive molecular analysis of 333 primary prostate carcinomas. Our results revealed a molecular taxonomy in which 74% of these tumors fell into one of seven subtypes defined by specific gene fusions (ERG, ETV1/4, and FLI1) or mutations (SPOP, FOXA1, and IDH1). Epigenetic profiles showed substantial heterogeneity, including an IDH1 mutant subset with a methylator phenotype. Androgen receptor (AR) activity varied widely and in a subtype-specific manner, with SPOP and FOXA1 mutant tumors having the highest levels of AR-induced transcripts. 25% of the prostate cancers had a presumed actionable lesion in the PI3K or MAPK signaling pathways, and DNA repair genes were inactivated in 19%. Our analysis reveals molecular heterogeneity among primary prostate cancers, as well as potentially actionable molecular defects.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Abeshouse, A; Ahn, J; Akbani, R; Ally, A; Amin, S; Andry, CD; et al.(2015). The Molecular Taxonomy of Primary Prostate Cancer. Cell, 163(4), 1011-1025. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.10.025. UC San Francisco: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6wr0q3b4
Accession number :
edsair.od.......325..5a7d4c12b1340bb0ae65cd4c42ace1e5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2015.10.025.