Abstract

BackgroundInvasive cribriform and intraductal carcinoma (CR/IDC) is associated with adverse outcome of prostate cancer patients. The aim of this study was to determine the molecular aberrations associated with CR/IDC in primary prostate cancer, focusing on genomic instability and somatic copy number alterations (CNA).MethodsWhole-slide images of The Cancer Genome Atlas Project (TCGA, N = 260) and the Canadian Prostate Cancer Genome Network (CPC-GENE, N = 199) radical prostatectomy datasets were reviewed for Gleason score (GS) and presence of CR/IDC. Genomic instability was assessed by calculating the percentage of genome altered (PGA). Somatic copy number alterations (CNA) were determined using Fisher-Boschloo tests and logistic regression. Primary analysis were performed on TCGA (N = 260) as discovery and CPC-GENE (N = 199) as validation set.ResultsCR/IDC growth was present in 80/260 (31%) TCGA and 76/199 (38%) CPC-GENE cases. Patients with CR/IDC and ≥ GS 7 had significantly higher PGA than men without this pattern in both TCGA (2.2 fold; p = 0.0003) and CPC-GENE (1.7 fold; p = 0.004) cohorts. CR/IDC growth was associated with deletions of 8p, 16q, 10q23, 13q22, 17p13, 21q22, and amplification of 8q24. CNAs comprised a total of 1299 gene deletions and 369 amplifications in the TCGA dataset, of which 474 and 328 events were independently validated, respectively. Several of the affected genes were known to be associated with aggressive prostate cancer such as loss of PTEN, CDH1, BCAR1 and gain of MYC. Point mutations in TP53, SPOP and FOXA1were also associated with CR/IDC, but occurred less frequently than CNAs.ConclusionsCR/IDC growth is associated with increased genomic instability clustering to genetic regions involved in aggressive prostate cancer. Therefore, CR/IDC is a pathologic substrate for progressive molecular tumour derangement.

Highlights

  • Invasive cribriform and intraductal carcinoma (CR/intraductal carcinoma of the prostate (IDC)) is associated with adverse outcome of prostate cancer patients

  • cribriform and intraductal carcinoma (CR/IDC) is associated with genomic instability To assess whether CR/IDC was associated with genomic instability, we calculated percentage of genome altered (PGA) for all patients and used a Wilcoxon-test to identify significant differences [17, 26]

  • Subgroup analysis revealed that PGA was significantly higher in samples with CR/IDC in Gleason score (GS) 4 + 3 = 7 (2.2 fold; p = 5.3·10−3), but not in GS 3 + 4 = 7 (2.1 fold; p = 0.19), GS 8 (5.1 fold; p = 0.57) and GS 9–10 (1.7 fold; p = 0.10)

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive cribriform and intraductal carcinoma (CR/IDC) is associated with adverse outcome of prostate cancer patients. Prostate cancer is heterogeneous regarding its pathologic features, genetic background and clinical outcome. Clinicaldecision making mostly depends upon serum Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) level, clinical tumour stage, and pathologic biopsy Gleason score (GS) – a grading system based on architectural tumour patterns [1]. In recent years the clinical relevance of intraductal carcinoma of the prostate (IDC) – a malignant epithelial. Our group has shown that patients with cribriform and/or intraductal carcinoma (CR/IDC), have significantly worse diseasespecific survival probabilities than those without, regardless of GS [13]. Patients with focal CR/IDC have similar outcome as men with extensive CR/IDC, indicating that the mere presence of this growth pattern is an adverse feature [13, 14]

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