Abstract

Early neoplastic progression of Barrett's esophagus (BE) is often treated with endoscopic therapy. While effective, some patients are refractory to therapy or recur after apparent eradication of the BE. The goal of this study was to determine whether genomic alterations within the treated BE may be associated with persistent or recurrent disease. We performed DNA sequencing on pre-treatment esophageal samples from 45 patients who were successfully treated by endoscopic therapy and did not recur as well as pre- and post-treatment samples from 40 patients who had persistent neoplasia and 21 patients who had recurrent neoplasia. The genomic alterations were compared between groups. The genomic landscape was similar between all groups. Patients with persistent disease were more likely to have pre-treatment alterations involving the receptor tyrosine kinase pathway (p=0.01), amplifications of oncogenes (p=0.01), and deletions of tumor suppressor genes (p=0.02). These associations were no longer significant after adjusting for patient age and BE length. Over half of patients with persistent (52.5%) or recurrent (57.2%) disease showed pre- and post-treatment samples that shared at least 50% of their driver mutations. Pre-treatment samples were genomically similar between those who responded to endoscopic therapy and those who had persistent or recurrent disease, suggesting there is not a strong genomic component to treatment response. While it was expected to find shared driver mutations in pre- and post-treatment samples in patients with persistent disease, the finding that an equal number of patients with recurrent disease also showed this relation suggests that many recurrences represent undetected minimal residual disease.

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