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The evolution of lung cancer and impact of subclonal selection in TRACERx.pdf (62.53 MB)

The evolution of lung cancer and impact of subclonal selection in TRACERx

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posted on 2023-05-22, 09:55 authored by AM Frankell, M Dietzen, M Al Bakir, EL Lim, T Karasaki, S Ward, S Veeriah, E Colliver, A Huebner, A Bunkum, MS Hill, K Grigoriadis, DA Moore, JRM Black, WK Liu, K Thol, O Pich, TBK Watkins, C Naceur-Lombardelli, DE Cook, R Salgado, GA Wilson, C Bailey, M Angelova, R Bentham, C Martínez-Ruiz, C Abbosh, AG Nicholson, J Le Quesne, D Biswas, R Rosenthal, C Puttick, S Hessey, C Lee, P Prymas, A Toncheva, J Smith, W Xing, J Nicod, G Price, KM Kerr, B Naidu, G Middleton, KG Blyth, DA Fennell, MD Forster, SM Lee, M Falzon, M Hewish, MJ Shackcloth, E Lim, S Benafif, P Russell, E Boleti, MG Krebs, JF Lester, D Papadatos-Pastos, T Ahmad, RM Thakrar, D Lawrence, N Navani, SM Janes, C Dive, FH Blackhall, Y Summers, J Cave, T Marafioti, J Herrero, SA Quezada, KS Peggs, RF Schwarz, P Van Loo, DM Miedema, NJ Birkbak, CT Hiley, A Hackshaw, S Zaccaria, A Bajaj, A Nakas, A Sodha-Ramdeen, K Ang, M Tufail, MF Chowdhry, M Scotland, R Boyles, S Rathinam, C Wilson, D Marrone, S Dulloo, G Matharu, JA Shaw, J Riley, L Primrose, H Cheyne, M Khalil, S Richardson, T Cruickshank, K Gilbert, Mariam Jamal-HanjaniMariam Jamal-Hanjani, Nicholas McGranahanNicholas McGranahan, Charles SwantonCharles Swanton
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-associated mortality worldwide1. Here we analysed 1,644 tumour regions sampled at surgery or during follow-up from the first 421 patients with non-small cell lung cancer prospectively enrolled into the TRACERx study. This project aims to decipher lung cancer evolution and address the primary study endpoint: determining the relationship between intratumour heterogeneity and clinical outcome. In lung adenocarcinoma, mutations in 22 out of 40 common cancer genes were under significant subclonal selection, including classical tumour initiators such as TP53 and KRAS. We defined evolutionary dependencies between drivers, mutational processes and whole genome doubling (WGD) events. Despite patients having a history of smoking, 8% of lung adenocarcinomas lacked evidence of tobacco-induced mutagenesis. These tumours also had similar detection rates for EGFR mutations and for RET, ROS1, ALK and MET oncogenic isoforms compared with tumours in never-smokers, which suggests that they have a similar aetiology and pathogenesis. Large subclonal expansions were associated with positive subclonal selection. Patients with tumours harbouring recent subclonal expansions, on the terminus of a phylogenetic branch, had significantly shorter disease-free survival. Subclonal WGD was detected in 19% of tumours, and 10% of tumours harboured multiple subclonal WGDs in parallel. Subclonal, but not truncal, WGD was associated with shorter disease-free survival. Copy number heterogeneity was associated with extrathoracic relapse within 1 year after surgery. These data demonstrate the importance of clonal expansion, WGD and copy number instability in determining the timing and patterns of relapse in non-small cell lung cancer and provide a comprehensive clinical cancer evolutionary data resource.

History

Author affiliation

Leicester cancer research centre, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Nature

Volume

616

Issue

7957

Pagination

525 - 533

Publisher

Nature Research

issn

0028-0836

eissn

1476-4687

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-05-22

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

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