University of Leicester
Browse

Evolutionary characterization of lung adenocarcinoma morphology in TRACERx

journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-11, 12:48 authored by T Karasaki, DA Moore, S Veeriah, C Naceur-Lombardelli, A Toncheva, N Magno, S Ward, MA Bakir, TBK Watkins, K Grigoriadis, A Huebner, MS Hill, AM Frankell, C Abbosh, C Puttick, H Zhai, F Gimeno-Valiente, S Saghafinia, N Kanu, M Dietzen, O Pich, EL Lim, C Martínez-Ruiz, JRM Black, D Biswas, BB Campbell, C Lee, E Colliver, KSS Enfield, S Hessey, CT Hiley, S Zaccaria, K Litchfield, NJ Birkbak, EL Cadieux, J Demeulemeester, P Van Loo, PS Adusumilli, KS Tan, W Cheema, F Sanchez-Vega, DR Jones, N Rekhtman, WD Travis, A Hackshaw, T Marafioti, R Salgado, J Le Quesne, AG Nicholson, TRACERx consortium, DA Fennell, JA Shaw
<p>Lung adenocarcinomas (LUADs) display a broad histological spectrum from low-grade lepidic tumors through to mid-grade acinar and papillary and high-grade solid, cribriform and micropapillary tumors. How morphology reflects tumor evolution and disease progression is poorly understood. Whole-exome sequencing data generated from 805 primary tumor regions and 121 paired metastatic samples across 248 LUADs from the TRACERx 421 cohort, together with RNA-sequencing data from 463 primary tumor regions, were integrated with detailed whole-tumor and regional histopathological analysis. Tumors with predominantly high-grade patterns showed increased chromosomal complexity, with higher burden of loss of heterozygosity and subclonal somatic copy number alterations. Individual regions in predominantly high-grade pattern tumors exhibited higher proliferation and lower clonal diversity, potentially reflecting large recent subclonal expansions. Co-occurrence of truncal loss of chromosomes 3p and 3q was enriched in predominantly low-/mid-grade tumors, while purely undifferentiated solid-pattern tumors had a higher frequency of truncal arm or focal 3q gains and SMARCA4 gene alterations compared with mixed-pattern tumors with a solid component, suggesting distinct evolutionary trajectories. Clonal evolution analysis revealed that tumors tend to evolve toward higher-grade patterns. The presence of micropapillary pattern and ‘tumor spread through air spaces’ were associated with intrathoracic recurrence, in contrast to the presence of solid/cribriform patterns, necrosis and preoperative circulating tumor DNA detection, which were associated with extra-thoracic recurrence. These data provide insights into the relationship between LUAD morphology, the underlying evolutionary genomic landscape, and clinical and anatomical relapse risk.</p>

History

Author affiliation

Department of Genetics and Genome Biology, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Nature Medicine

Volume

29

Issue

4

Pagination

833 - 845

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

issn

1078-8956

eissn

1546-170X

Copyright date

2023

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC