학술논문

Multi-regional Sequencing Analysis Reveals Extensive Genetic Heterogeneity in Gastric Tumors from Latinos
Document Type
article
Source
Cancer Research Communications. 2(11)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Cancer Genomics
Digestive Diseases
Minority Health
Cancer
Rare Diseases
Health Disparities
Prevention
Genetic Testing
Human Genome
Good Health and Well Being
Humans
Carcinogenesis
Eye Proteins
Genetic Heterogeneity
Hispanic or Latino
Mutation
Stomach Neoplasms
Asian
White
Prognosis
gastric cancer
stomach cancer
tumor heterogeneity
cancer genomics
cancer disparities
health disparities
tumor evolution
cancer mutations
mutation signatures
targeted therapies
cancer health equity
Language
Abstract
Gastric cancer is a leading cause of cancer mortality and health disparities in Latinos. We evaluated gastric intratumoral heterogeneity using multiregional sequencing of >700 cancer genes in 115 tumor biopsies from 32 patients, 29 who were Latinos. Analyses focused on comparisons with The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and on mutation clonality, druggability, and signatures. We found that only approximately 30% of all mutations were clonal and that only 61% of the known TCGA gastric cancer drivers harbored clonal mutations. Multiple clonal mutations were found in new candidate gastric cancer drivers such as EYS, FAT4, PCDHA1, RAD50, EXO1, RECQL4, and FSIP2. The genomically stable (GS) molecular subtype, which has the worse prognosis, was identified in 48% of our Latino patients, a fraction that was >2.3-fold higher than in TCGA Asian and White patients. Only a third of all tumors harbored clonal pathogenic mutations in druggable genes, with most (93%) GS tumors lacking actionable clonal mutations. Mutation signature analyses revealed that, in microsatellite-stable (MSS) tumors, DNA repair mutations were common for both tumor initiation and progression, while tobacco, POLE, and inflammation signatures likely initiate carcinogenesis. MSS tumor progression was likely driven by aging- and aflatoxin-associated mutations, as these latter changes were usually nonclonal. In microsatellite-unstable tumors, nonclonal tobacco-associated mutations were common. Our study, therefore, contributed to advancing gastric cancer molecular diagnostics and suggests clonal status is important to understanding gastric tumorigenesis. Our findings of a higher frequency of a poor prognosis associated molecular subtype in Latinos and a possible new aflatoxin gastric cancer etiology also advance cancer disparities research.SignificanceOur study contributes to advancing our knowledge of gastric carcinogenesis, diagnostics, and cancer health disparities.