학술논문

Longitudinal molecular trajectories of diffuse glioma in adults
Document Type
article
Author
Barthel, Floris PJohnson, Kevin CVarn, Frederick SMoskalik, Anzhela DTanner, GeorgetteKocakavuk, EmreAnderson, Kevin JAbiola, OlajideAldape, KennethAlfaro, Kristin DAlpar, DonatAmin, Samirkumar BAshley, David MBandopadhayay, PratitiBarnholtz-Sloan, Jill SBeroukhim, RameenBock, ChristophBrastianos, Priscilla KBrat, Daniel JBrodbelt, Andrew RBruns, Alexander FBulsara, Ketan RChakrabarty, ArunaChakravarti, ArnabChuang, Jeffrey HClaus, Elizabeth BCochran, Elizabeth JConnelly, JenniferCostello, Joseph FFinocchiaro, GaetanoFletcher, Michael NFrench, Pim JGan, Hui KGilbert, Mark RGould, Peter VGrimmer, Matthew RIavarone, AntonioIsmail, AzzamJenkinson, Michael DKhasraw, MustafaKim, HoonKouwenhoven, Mathilde CMLaViolette, Peter SLi, MeihongLichter, PeterLigon, Keith LLowman, Allison KMalta, Tathiane MMazor, TaliMcDonald, Kerrie LMolinaro, Annette MNam, Do-HyunNayyar, NaemaNg, Ho KeungNgan, Chew YeeNiclou, Simone PNiers, Johanna MNoushmehr, HoutanNoorbakhsh, JavadOrmond, D RyanPark, Chul-KeePoisson, Laila MRabadan, RaulRadlwimmer, BernhardRao, GaneshReifenberger, GuidoSa, Jason KSchuster, MichaelShaw, Brian LShort, Susan CSmitt, Peter A SillevisSloan, Andrew ESmits, MarionSuzuki, HiromichiTabatabai, GhazalehVan Meir, Erwin GWatts, ColinWeller, MichaelWesseling, PieterWesterman, Bart AWidhalm, GeorgWoehrer, AdelheidYung, WK AlfredZadeh, GelarehHuse, Jason TDe Groot, John FStead, Lucy FVerhaak, Roel GW
Source
Nature. 576(7785)
Subject
Neurosciences
Brain Disorders
Cancer
Rare Diseases
Brain Cancer
Genetics
Adult
Chromosomes
Human
Pair 1
Chromosomes
Human
Pair 19
Disease Progression
Glioma
Humans
Isocitrate Dehydrogenase
Mutation
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Recurrence
GLASS Consortium
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
The evolutionary processes that drive universal therapeutic resistance in adult patients with diffuse glioma remain unclear1,2. Here we analysed temporally separated DNA-sequencing data and matched clinical annotation from 222 adult patients with glioma. By analysing mutations and copy numbers across the three major subtypes of diffuse glioma, we found that driver genes detected at the initial stage of disease were retained at recurrence, whereas there was little evidence of recurrence-specific gene alterations. Treatment with alkylating agents resulted in a hypermutator phenotype at different rates across the glioma subtypes, and hypermutation was not associated with differences in overall survival. Acquired aneuploidy was frequently detected in recurrent gliomas and was characterized by IDH mutation but without co-deletion of chromosome arms 1p/19q, and further converged with acquired alterations in the cell cycle and poor outcomes. The clonal architecture of each tumour remained similar over time, but the presence of subclonal selection was associated with decreased survival. Finally, there were no differences in the levels of immunoediting between initial and recurrent gliomas. Collectively, our results suggest that the strongest selective pressures occur during early glioma development and that current therapies shape this evolution in a largely stochastic manner.