Multifocal clonal evolution characterized using circulating tumour DNA in a case of metastatic breast cancer

Circulating tumour DNA analysis can be used to track tumour burden and analyse cancer genomes non-invasively but the extent to which it represents metastatic heterogeneity is unknown. Here we follow a patient with metastatic ER-positive and HER2-positive breast cancer receiving two lines of targeted...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2015-11, Vol.6 (1), p.8760, Article 8760
Hauptverfasser: Murtaza, Muhammed, Dawson, Sarah-Jane, Pogrebniak, Katherine, Rueda, Oscar M., Provenzano, Elena, Grant, John, Chin, Suet-Feung, Tsui, Dana W. Y., Marass, Francesco, Gale, Davina, Ali, H. Raza, Shah, Pankti, Contente-Cuomo, Tania, Farahani, Hossein, Shumansky, Karey, Kingsbury, Zoya, Humphray, Sean, Bentley, David, Shah, Sohrab P., Wallis, Matthew, Rosenfeld, Nitzan, Caldas, Carlos
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Circulating tumour DNA analysis can be used to track tumour burden and analyse cancer genomes non-invasively but the extent to which it represents metastatic heterogeneity is unknown. Here we follow a patient with metastatic ER-positive and HER2-positive breast cancer receiving two lines of targeted therapy over 3 years. We characterize genomic architecture and infer clonal evolution in eight tumour biopsies and nine plasma samples collected over 1,193 days of clinical follow-up using exome and targeted amplicon sequencing. Mutation levels in the plasma samples reflect the clonal hierarchy inferred from sequencing of tumour biopsies. Serial changes in circulating levels of sub-clonal private mutations correlate with different treatment responses between metastatic sites. This comparison of biopsy and plasma samples in a single patient with metastatic breast cancer shows that circulating tumour DNA can allow real-time sampling of multifocal clonal evolution. Individual tumours are heterogeneous with regards to genetic mutations. In this study, the authors use sequencing to follow multiple tumour and plasma samples over 3 years from a breast cancer patient and show mutations detected in the plasma samples could partially reproduce the clonal nature of the primary tumour.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms9760