4.8 Article

The evolutionary history of lethal metastatic prostate cancer

Journal

NATURE
Volume 520, Issue 7547, Pages 353-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature14347

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Cancer Research UK
  2. NIH NCI Intramural Program
  3. Academy of Finland
  4. Cancer Society of Finland
  5. PELICAN Autopsy Study family members and friends
  6. John and Kathe Dyson
  7. US National Cancer Institute [CA92234]
  8. American Cancer Society
  9. Johns Hopkins University Department of Pathology
  10. Women's Board of Johns Hopkins Hospital
  11. Grove Foundation
  12. Association for the Cure of Cancer of the Prostate
  13. American Foundation for Urologic Disease
  14. Bob Champion Cancer Trust
  15. Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO) [FWO-G.0687.12]
  16. Cancer Research UK [15007, 17528] Funding Source: researchfish
  17. The Francis Crick Institute [10202] Funding Source: researchfish
  18. Versus Arthritis
  19. Cancer Research UK [20406] Funding Source: researchfish

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Cancers emerge from an ongoing Darwinian evolutionary process, often leading to multiple competing subdones within a single primary tumour(1-4). This evolutionary process culminates in the formation of metastases, which is the cause of 90% of cancer-related deaths(5). However, despite its clinical importance, little is known about the principles governing the dissemination of cancer cells to distant organs. Although the hypothesis that each metastasis originates from a single tumour cell is generally supported(6-8), recent studies using mouse models of cancer demonstrated the existence of polyclonal seeding from and interclonal cooperation between multiple subdonee(9,10). Here we sought definitive evidence for the existence of polydonal seeding in human malignancy and to establish the clonal relationship among different metastases in the context of androgendeprived metastatic prostate cancer. Using whole-genome sequencing, we characterized multiple metastases arising from prostate tumours in ten patients. Integrated analyses of subdonal architecture revealed the patterns of metastatic spread in unprecedented detail. Metastasis-to-metastasis spread was found to be common, either through de novo monoclonal seeding of daughter metastases or, in five cases, through the transfer of multiple tumour clones between metastatic sites. Lesions affecting tumour suppressor genes usually occur as single events, whereas mutations in genes involved in androgen receptor signalling commonly involve multiple, convergent events in different metastases. Our results elucidate in detail the complex patterns of metastatic spread and further our understanding of the development of resistance to androgen-deprivation therapy in prostate cancer.

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