학술논문

Mutational Analysis Reveals the Origin and Therapy-Driven Evolution of Recurrent Glioma
Document Type
article
Source
Science. 343(6167)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Cancer Genomics
Human Genome
Brain Cancer
Genetics
Cancer
Rare Diseases
Brain Disorders
Orphan Drug
Neurosciences
Good Health and Well Being
Antineoplastic Agents
Alkylating
Brain
Brain Neoplasms
DNA Helicases
DNA Mutational Analysis
Dacarbazine
Glioma
Humans
Mutagenesis
Neoplasm Grading
Neoplasm Recurrence
Local
Nuclear Proteins
Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt
TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases
Temozolomide
Transcription Factors
Tumor Suppressor Protein p53
X-linked Nuclear Protein
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
Tumor recurrence is a leading cause of cancer mortality. Therapies for recurrent disease may fail, at least in part, because the genomic alterations driving the growth of recurrences are distinct from those in the initial tumor. To explore this hypothesis, we sequenced the exomes of 23 initial low-grade gliomas and recurrent tumors resected from the same patients. In 43% of cases, at least half of the mutations in the initial tumor were undetected at recurrence, including driver mutations in TP53, ATRX, SMARCA4, and BRAF; this suggests that recurrent tumors are often seeded by cells derived from the initial tumor at a very early stage of their evolution. Notably, tumors from 6 of 10 patients treated with the chemotherapeutic drug temozolomide (TMZ) followed an alternative evolutionary path to high-grade glioma. At recurrence, these tumors were hypermutated and harbored driver mutations in the RB (retinoblastoma) and Akt-mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) pathways that bore the signature of TMZ-induced mutagenesis.