Abstract

Purpose: Neuroblastoma displays important clinical and genetic heterogeneity, with emergence of new mutations at tumor progression.Experimental Design: To study clonal evolution during treatment and follow-up, an innovative method based on circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) analysis by whole-exome sequencing (WES) paired with target sequencing was realized in sequential liquid biopsy samples of 19 neuroblastoma patients.Results: WES of the primary tumor and cfDNA at diagnosis showed overlap of single-nucleotide variants (SNV) and copy number alterations, with 41% and 93% of all detected alterations common to the primary neuroblastoma and cfDNA. CfDNA WES at a second time point indicated a mean of 22 new SNVs for patients with progressive disease. Relapse-specific alterations included genes of the MAPK pathway and targeted the protein kinase A signaling pathway. Deep coverage target sequencing of intermediate time points during treatment and follow-up identified distinct subclones. For 17 seemingly relapse-specific SNVs detected by cfDNA WES at relapse but not tumor or cfDNA WES at diagnosis, deep coverage target sequencing detected these alterations in minor subclones, with relapse-emerging SNVs targeting genes of neuritogenesis and cell cycle. Furthermore a persisting, resistant clone with concomitant disappearance of other clones was identified by a mutation in the ubiquitin protein ligase HERC2Conclusions: Modelization of mutated allele fractions in cfDNA indicated distinct patterns of clonal evolution, with either a minor, treatment-resistant clone expanding to a major clone at relapse, or minor clones collaborating toward tumor progression. Identification of treatment-resistant clones will enable development of more efficient treatment strategies. Clin Cancer Res; 24(4); 939-49. ©2017 AACR.

Highlights

  • Analysis of circulating tumor DNA, a fraction of cellfree DNA, is a revolutionary tool for the study of tumorspecific genetic alterations in patients with cancer

  • For 17 seemingly relapse-specific single-nucleotide variants (SNV) detected by cell-free DNA (cfDNA) whole-exome sequencing (WES) at relapse but not tumor or cfDNA WES at diagnosis, deep coverage target sequencing detected these alterations in minor subclones, with relapse-emerging SNVs targeting genes of neuritogenesis and cell cycle

  • Modelization of mutated allele fractions in cfDNA indicated distinct patterns of clonal evolution, with either a minor, treatment-resistant clone expanding to a major clone at relapse, or minor clones collaborating toward tumor progression

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Analysis of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), a fraction of cellfree DNA (cfDNA), is a revolutionary tool for the study of tumorspecific genetic alterations in patients with cancer. Extracted from blood, it can be used as a surrogate marker for molecular diagnosis, and for estimation of tumor burden [1,2,3]. These techniques enable an access of tumor molecular information when a biopsy is impossible and render sequential molecular analyses possible. Few recurrent mutations have been described, the most frequent targeting ALK (10%–12%), genes involved in chromatin remodeling (ATRX, ARID1A), or TERT rearrangements

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call