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The Genomic Landscape of Early-Stage Ovarian High-Grade Serous Carcinoma

Authors :
Cheng, Z
Mirza, H
Ennis, DP
Smith, P
Morrill Gavarro, L
Sokota, C
Giannone, G
Goranova, T
Bradley, T
Piskorz, A
Lockley, M
For the BriTROC-1 Investigators
Kaur, B
Singh, N
Tookman, L
Krell, J
McDermott, J
Macintyre, G
Markowetz, F
Brenton, JD
McNeish, I
Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust- BRC Funding
Cancer Research UK
Ovarian Cancer Action
National Institute for Health Research
Source :
Clin Cancer Res
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Purpose: Ovarian high-grade serous carcinoma (HGSC) is usually diagnosed at late stage. We investigated whether late-stage HGSC has unique genomic characteristics consistent with acquisition of evolutionary advantage compared with early-stage tumors. Experimental Design: We performed targeted next-generation sequencing and shallow whole-genome sequencing (sWGS) on pretreatment samples from 43 patients with FIGO stage I–IIA HGSC to investigate somatic mutations and copy-number (CN) alterations (SCNA). We compared results to pretreatment samples from 52 patients with stage IIIC/IV HGSC from the BriTROC-1 study. Results: Age of diagnosis did not differ between early-stage and late-stage patients (median 61.3 years vs. 62.3 years, respectively). TP53 mutations were near-universal in both cohorts (89% early-stage, 100% late-stage), and there were no significant differences in the rates of other somatic mutations, including BRCA1 and BRCA2. We also did not observe cohort-specific focal SCNA that could explain biological behavior. However, ploidy was higher in late-stage (median, 3.0) than early-stage (median, 1.9) samples. CN signature exposures were significantly different between cohorts, with greater relative signature 3 exposure in early-stage and greater signature 4 in late-stage. Unsupervised clustering based on CN signatures identified three clusters that were prognostic. Conclusions: Early-stage and late-stage HGSCs have highly similar patterns of mutation and focal SCNA. However, CN signature analysis showed that late-stage disease has distinct signature exposures consistent with whole-genome duplication. Further analyses will be required to ascertain whether these differences reflect genuine biological differences between early-stage and late-stage or simply time-related markers of evolutionary fitness. See related commentary by Yang et al., p. 2730

Details

ISSN :
15573265
Volume :
28
Issue :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....62bdd1ba05393ea432bbbc3de8e9fbdc