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Data from Genomes for Kids: The Scope of Pathogenic Mutations in Pediatric Cancer Revealed by Comprehensive DNA and RNA Sequencing

Data from Genomes for Kids: The Scope of Pathogenic Mutations in Pediatric Cancer Revealed by Comprehensive DNA and RNA Sequencing

Authors :
Kim E. Nichols
Jinghui Zhang
James R. Downing
David W. Ellison
Ching-Hon Pui
Liza-Marie Johnson
Giles Robinson
Alberto S. Pappo
Stacy J. Hines-Dowell
Jessica M. Valdez
Leslie M. Taylor
Elsie L. Gerhardt
Roya Mostafavi
Regina Nuccio
Emily A. Quinn
Rose B. McGee
Charles G. Mullighan
Zhaohui Gu
Jian Wang
Alexander M. Gout
Jay Knight
Victor Pastor
Jamie L. Maciaszek
Manish Kubal
Delaram Rahbarinia
Mark R. Wilkinson
Aman Patel
Jared Becksfort
Eric Davis
Manjusha Pande
Ti-Cheng Chang
Xin Zhou
Samuel W. Brady
Yu Liu
Zhaojie Zhang
Yanling Liu
Antonina Silkov
Annastasia Ouma
Michael R. Clay
Lu Wang
Lynn W. Harrison
Jiali Gu
Jeffery M. Klco
Brent A. Orr
Armita Bahrami
Andrew Thrasher
Michael N. Edmonson
Scott G. Foy
Kayla V. Hamilton
Dale J. Hedges
Sheila Shurtleff
Michael Rusch
David A. Wheeler
Elizabeth M. Azzato
Chimene A. Kesserwan
Joy Nakitandwe
Scott Newman
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Genomic studies of pediatric cancer have primarily focused on specific tumor types or high-risk disease. Here, we used a three-platform sequencing approach, including whole-genome sequencing (WGS), whole-exome sequencing (WES), and RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), to examine tumor and germline genomes from 309 prospectively identified children with newly diagnosed (85%) or relapsed/refractory (15%) cancers, unselected for tumor type. Eighty-six percent of patients harbored diagnostic (53%), prognostic (57%), therapeutically relevant (25%), and/or cancer-predisposing (18%) variants. Inclusion of WGS enabled detection of activating gene fusions and enhancer hijacks (36% and 8% of tumors, respectively), small intragenic deletions (15% of tumors), and mutational signatures revealing of pathogenic variant effects. Evaluation of paired tumor–normal data revealed relevance to tumor development for 55% of pathogenic germline variants. This study demonstrates the power of a three-platform approach that incorporates WGS to interrogate and interpret the full range of genomic variants across newly diagnosed as well as relapsed/refractory pediatric cancers.Significance:Pediatric cancers are driven by diverse genomic lesions, and sequencing has proven useful in evaluating high-risk and relapsed/refractory cases. We show that combined WGS, WES, and RNA-seq of tumor and paired normal tissues enables identification and characterization of genetic drivers across the full spectrum of pediatric cancers.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2945

Details

ISSN :
21598290
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d0766fc82b48ecf1bf79e0f14636f6d6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.c.6549437