Abstract

Information on the clonal relationship between tumor nodules in patients diagnosed with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) holds prognostic significance in the prediction of recurrence and postoperative treatment. Here, we investigated the clonal relationships in 11 focal nodules from 5 patients with HCC by comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) and spectral karyotyping. CGH analysis indicated tumor nodules in 5 (100%) of 5 cases to share similar patterns of genomic imbalances, suggesting nodules to be clonally related. This clonal relationship was further substantiated in 2 cases, where spectral karyotyping analysis indicated identical structural rearrangements between focal tumors. Few studies have attempted to differentiate multicentric growth from intrahepatic dissemination in HCC using CGH analysis; however, data interpretation remained subjective. In this study, we have extended our data to include published CGH findings on 57 nodules derived from 19 HCC cases. Simulation of CGH findings by unsupervised 2-way hierarchical clustering indicated tumor nodules in 20 (83.3%) of 24 cases to cluster concordantly, signifying a high incidence of clonal similarity. In sum, bioinformatic analysis of genomic profiles may represent a reliable research tool in analyzing clonal relationships among tumor nodules.

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