4.3 Article

Clonal expansion and linear genome evolution through breast cancer progression from pre-invasive stages to asynchronous metastasis

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 6, Issue 8, Pages 5634-5649

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.3111

Keywords

Breast cancer; Metastasis models; Copy number aberrations; Linear progression model

Funding

  1. Odense University Hospital Free Research Fund
  2. Harboefonden
  3. Aase og Ejnar Danielsen Fond
  4. Fabrikant Einar Willumsens Mindelegat
  5. Grosserer M. Brogaard og Hustrus Mindefond
  6. Kong Christian Den Tiendes Fond
  7. Dagmar Marshalls Fond
  8. Axel Muusfeldts Fond
  9. Kraeftfonden
  10. Raimond og Dagmar Ringgard-Bohns Fond
  11. Grete og Sigurd Pedersens Fond
  12. Syddansk Universitets Forskningsfond
  13. Poul og Ellen Hertz' Fond
  14. Fonden til Laegevidenskabens Fremme
  15. Grosserer A.V. Lykfeldt og Hustrus Legat
  16. Familien Hede Nielsens Fond
  17. Lykfeldts Legat
  18. Dansk Kraeftforskningsfond
  19. Ulla og Mogens Folmer Andersens Fond
  20. Ingenior K. A. Rohde og Hustrus Legat
  21. Krista og Viggo Petersens Fond
  22. Lundbeckfonden Center of Excellence NanoCAN grant
  23. DAWN project grant from the SDU Excellence program
  24. Danish Strategic Research Counsil
  25. DBCG-TIBCAT

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Evolution of the breast cancer genome from pre-invasive stages to asynchronous metastasis is complex and mostly unexplored, but highly demanded as it may provide novel markers for and mechanistic insights in cancer progression. The increasing use of personalized therapy of breast cancer necessitates knowledge of the degree of genomic concordance between different steps of malignant progression as primary tumors often are used as surrogates of systemic disease. Based on exome sequencing we performed copy number profiling and point mutation detection on successive steps of breast cancer progression from one breast cancer patient, including two different regions of Ductal Carcinoma In Situ (DCIS), primary tumor and an asynchronous metastasis. We identify a remarkable landscape of somatic mutations, retained throughout breast cancer progression and with new mutational events emerging at each step. Our data, contrary to the proposed model of early dissemination of metastatic cells and parallel progression of primary tumors and metastases, provide evidence of linear progression of breast cancer with relatively late dissemination from the primary tumor. The genomic discordance between the different stages of tumor evolution in this patient emphasizes the importance of molecular profiling of metastatic tissue directing molecularly targeted therapy at recurrence.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available