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Genomic analysis defines clonal relationships of ductal carcinoma in situ and recurrent invasive breast cancer.

Esther H Lips ,
Tapsi Kumar ,
Anargyros Megalios ,
Lindy L Visser ,
Michael Sheinman ,
Angelo Fortunato ,
Vandna Shah ,
Marlous Hoogstraat ,
Emi Sei ,
Diego Mallo ,
Maria Roman-Escorza ,
Ahmed A Ahmed ,
Mingchu Xu ,
Alexandra W van den Belt-Dusebout ,
Wim Brugman ,
Anna K Casasent ,
Karen Clements ,
Helen R Davies ,
Liping Fu ,
Anita Grigoriadis ,
Timothy M Hardman ,
Lorraine M King ,
Marielle Krete ,
Petra Kristel ,
Michiel de Maaker ,
Carlo C Maley ,
Jeffrey R Marks ,
Brian A Menegaz ,
Lennart Mulder ,
Frank Nieboer ,
Salpie Nowinski ,
Sarah Pinder ,
Jelmar Quist ,
Carolina Salinas-Souza ,
Michael Schaapveld ,
Marjanka K Schmidt ,
Abeer M Shaaban ,
Rana Shami ,
Mathini Sridharan ,
John Zhang ,
Hilary Stobart ,
Deborah Collyar ,
Serena Nik-Zainal ,
Lodewyk F A Wessels ,
E Shelley Hwang ,
Nicholas E Navin ,
P Andrew Futreal ,
,
Alastair M Thompson ,
Jelle Wesseling ,
Elinor J Sawyer

Abstract

Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is the most common form of preinvasive breast cancer and, despite treatment, a small fraction (5-10%) of DCIS patients develop subsequent invasive disease. A fundamental biologic question is whether the invasive disease arises from tumor cells in the initial DCIS or represents new unrelated disease. To address this question, we performed genomic analyses on the initial DCIS lesion and paired invasive recurrent tumors in 95 patients together with single-cell DNA sequencing in a subset of cases. Our data show that in 75% of cases the invasive recurrence was clonally related to the initial DCIS, suggesting that tumor cells were not eliminated during the initial treatment. Surprisingly, however, 18% were clonally unrelated to the DCIS, representing new independent lineages and 7% of cases were ambiguous. This knowledge is essential for accurate risk evaluation of DCIS, treatment de-escalation strategies and the identification of predictive biomarkers.

More about this publication

Nature genetics

Volume 54
Issue nr. 6
Pages 850-860
Publication date 01-06-2022

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/s41588-022-01082-3
Europe PubMed Central 35681052
Pubmed 35681052

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