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Data from Uncovering Clinically Relevant Gene Fusions with Integrated Genomic and Transcriptomic Profiling of Metastatic Cancers

Authors :
Jonathan M. Loree
Steven J.M. Jones
Marco A. Marra
Janessa Laskin
Stephen Yip
Daniel J. Renouf
David F. Schaeffer
Howard J. Lim
Sophie Sun
Tony Ng
Basile Tessier-Cloutier
Yongjun Zhao
Andrew J. Mungall
Richard A. Moore
Eric Chuah
Laura M. Williamson
Daniel MacMillan
Joanna M. Karasinska
Reanne Bowlby
Marcus Carreira
Caleb Choo
Caralyn Reisle
Karen Mungall
James T. Topham
Erin Pleasance
Cameron J. Grisdale
Erica S. Tsang
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose:Gene fusions are important oncogenic drivers and many are actionable. Whole-genome and transcriptome (WGS and RNA-seq, respectively) sequencing can discover novel clinically relevant fusions.Experimental Design:Using WGS and RNA-seq, we reviewed the prevalence of fusions in a cohort of 570 patients with cancer, and compared prevalence to that predicted with commercially available panels. Fusions were annotated using a consensus variant calling pipeline (MAVIS) and required that a contig of the breakpoint could be constructed and supported from ≥2 structural variant detection approaches.Results:In 570 patients with advanced cancer, MAVIS identified 81 recurrent fusions by WGS and 111 by RNA-seq, of which 18 fusions by WGS and 19 by RNA-seq were noted in at least 3 separate patients. The most common fusions were EML4-ALK in thoracic malignancies (9/69, 13%), and CMTM8-CMTM7 in colorectal cancer (4/73, 5.5%). Combined genomic and transcriptomic analysis identified novel fusion partners for clinically relevant genes, such as NTRK2 (novel partners: SHC3, DAPK1), and NTRK3 (novel partners: POLG, PIBF1).Conclusions:Utilizing WGS/RNA-seq facilitates identification of novel fusions in clinically relevant genes, and detected a greater proportion than commercially available panels are expected to find. A significant benefit of WGS and RNA-seq is the innate ability to retrospectively identify variants that becomes clinically relevant over time, without the need for additional testing, which is not possible with panel-based approaches.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d98f0b0e4af43af53927a3db7e60cf5c