The Genomics of Colorectal Cancer in Populations with African and European Ancestry

Black people have a higher incidence of colorectal cancer and worse survival rates when compared with white people. Comprehensive genomic profiling was performed in 46,140 colorectal adenocarcinoma cases. Ancestry-informative markers identified 5,301 patients of African descent (AFR) and 33,770 pati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer discovery 2022-05, Vol.12 (5), p.1282-1293
Hauptverfasser: Myer, Parvathi A, Lee, Jessica K, Madison, Russell W, Pradhan, Kith, Newberg, Justin Y, Isasi, Carmen R, Klempner, Samuel J, Frampton, Garrett M, Ross, Jeffery S, Venstrom, Jeffrey M, Schrock, Alexa B, Das, Sudipto, Augenlicht, Leonard, Verma, Amit, Greally, John M, Raj, Srilakshmi M, Goel, Sanjay, Ali, Siraj M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Black people have a higher incidence of colorectal cancer and worse survival rates when compared with white people. Comprehensive genomic profiling was performed in 46,140 colorectal adenocarcinoma cases. Ancestry-informative markers identified 5,301 patients of African descent (AFR) and 33,770 patients of European descent (EUR). AFR were younger, had fewer microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) tumors, and had significantly more frequent alterations in KRAS, APC, and PIK3CA. AFR had increased frequency of KRAS mutations, specifically KRASG12D and KRASG13. There were no differences in rates of actionable kinase driver alterations (HER2, MET, NTRK, ALK, ROS1, and RET). In patients with young-onset colorectal cancer (
ISSN:2159-8274
2159-8290
2159-8290
DOI:10.1158/2159-8290.CD-21-0813