Whole-Exome Sequencing Analysis of the Progression from Non-Low-Grade Ductal Carcinoma In Situ to Invasive Ductal Carcinoma

Ductal carcinoma (DCIS) is a nonobligate precursor of invasive breast cancer. Here, we sought to investigate the level of intralesion genetic heterogeneity in DCIS and the patterns of clonal architecture changes in the progression from DCIS to invasive disease. Synchronous DCIS ( = 27) and invasive...

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Published inClinical cancer research Vol. 26; no. 14; pp. 3682 - 3693
Main Authors Pareja, Fresia, Brown, David N, Lee, Ju Youn, Da Cruz Paula, Arnaud, Selenica, Pier, Bi, Rui, Geyer, Felipe C, Gazzo, Andrea, da Silva, Edaise M, Vahdatinia, Mahsa, Stylianou, Anthe A, Ferrando, Lorenzo, Wen, Hannah Y, Hicks, James B, Weigelt, Britta, Reis-Filho, Jorge S
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 15.07.2020
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Summary:Ductal carcinoma (DCIS) is a nonobligate precursor of invasive breast cancer. Here, we sought to investigate the level of intralesion genetic heterogeneity in DCIS and the patterns of clonal architecture changes in the progression from DCIS to invasive disease. Synchronous DCIS ( = 27) and invasive ductal carcinomas of no special type (IDC-NSTs; = 26) from 25 patients, and pure DCIS ( = 7) from 7 patients were microdissected separately and subjected to high-depth whole-exome ( = 56) or massively parallel sequencing targeting ≥410 key cancer-related genes ( = 4). Somatic genetic alterations, mutational signatures, clonal composition, and phylogenetic analyses were defined using validated computational methods. DCIS revealed genetic alterations similar to those of synchronously diagnosed IDC-NSTs and of non-related IDC-NSTs from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), whereas pure DCIS lacked mutations. Clonal decomposition and phylogenetic analyses based on somatic mutations and copy number alterations revealed that the mechanisms of progression of DCIS to invasive carcinoma are diverse, and that clonal selection might have constituted the mechanism of progression from DCIS to invasive disease in 28% (7/25) of patients. DCIS displaying a pattern of clonal selection in the progression to invasive cancer harbored higher levels of intralesion genetic heterogeneity than DCIS where no clonal selection was observed. Intralesion genetic heterogeneity is a common feature in DCIS synchronously diagnosed with IDC-NST. DCIS is a nonobligate precursor of IDC-NST, whose mechanisms of progression to invasive breast cancer are diverse and vary from case to case.
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JBH, BW and JSR-F conceived the study and supervised the work. FP and YHW provided samples. FP, RB, FCG, MV and YHW reviewed the cases. Sample processing was performed by FP, RB, EdS, MV and AS. Bioinformatics analysis was performed by DNB, JYL, ADCP, PS and AG. FP, DNB, JYL, ADCP, PS, AG and LF performed data analysis and data interpretation. FP and JYL wrote the first draft of the manuscript. All authors edited and approved the final draft.
Equal contribution
AUTHORS’ CONTRIBUTIONS
ISSN:1078-0432
1557-3265
DOI:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-2563