4.5 Review

Genomic heterogeneity in bladder cancer: challenges and possible solutions to improve outcomes

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NATURE REVIEWS UROLOGY
卷 17, 期 5, 页码 259-270

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41585-020-0304-1

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资金

  1. VA Merit Award [BX003692-01]
  2. Department of Defense Grant [W81XWH-18-0257]
  3. Leo and Anne Albert Institute of Bladder Cancer Research
  4. Sloan Kettering Institute for Cancer Research Cancer Center [P30CA008748]
  5. SPORE in Bladder Cancer [P50CA221745]
  6. Department of Defense CDMRP Career Development Award [CA160212]
  7. American Cancer Society [RSG 17-23301-TBE]
  8. American Urological Association Research Scholar Award
  9. CDMRP [917362, CA160212] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Histological and molecular analyses of urothelial carcinoma often reveal intratumoural and intertumoural heterogeneity at the genomic, transcriptional and cellular levels. Despite the clonal initiation of the tumour, progression and metastasis often arise from subclones that can develop naturally or during therapy, resulting in molecular alterations with a heterogeneous distribution. Variant histologies in tumour tissues that have developed distinct morphological characteristics divergent from urothelial carcinoma are extreme examples of tumour heterogeneity. Ultimately, heterogeneity contributes to drug resistance and relapse after therapy, resulting in poor survival outcomes. Mutation profile differences between patients with muscle-invasive and metastatic urothelial cancer (interpatient heterogeneity) probably contribute to variability in response to chemotherapy and immunotherapy as first-line treatments. Heterogeneity can occur on multiple levels and averaging or normalizing these alterations is crucial for clinical trial and drug design to enable appropriate therapeutic targeting. Identification of the extent of heterogeneity might shape the choice of monotherapy or additional combination treatments to target different drivers and genetic events. Identification of the lethal tumour cell clones is required to improve survival of patients with urothelial carcinoma. In this Review, Meeks et al. summarize heterogeneity in bladder cancer and how it affects tumour biology and clinical care. They describe current knowledge of tumour evolution, genomic heterogeneity and different tumour subtypes, as well as morphological heterogeneity seen in variant bladder cancer histology. They also discuss the influence of heterogeneity on treatment decision making, drug development and clinical trial design.

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