Characterization of Genetic Heterogeneity in Recurrent Metastases of Renal Cell Carcinoma

Author:

Sauter-Meyerhoff CarolinORCID,Bohnert Regina,Mazzola Pascale,Stühler Viktoria,Kandabarau Siarhei,Büttner Florian A.ORCID,Winter Stefan,Herrmann Lisa,Rausch SteffenORCID,Hennenlotter JörgORCID,Fend Falko,Scharpf Marcus,Stenzl ArnulfORCID,Ossowski Stephan,Bedke JensORCID,Schwab Matthias,Schaeffeler Elke

Abstract

Metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) exhibits poor prognosis. Better knowledge of distant metastases is crucial to foster personalized treatment strategies. Here, we aimed to investigate the genetic landscape of metastases, including synchronous and/or recurrent metastases to elucidate potential drug target genes and clinically relevant mutations in a real-world setting of patients. We assessed 81 metastases from 56 RCC patients, including synchronous and/or recurrent metastases of 19 patients. Samples were analysed through next-generation sequencing with a high coverage (~1000× mean coverage). We therefore established a novel sequencing panel comprising 32 genes with impact on RCC development. We observed a high frequency of mutations in known RCC driver genes (e.g., >40% carriers of VHL and PBRM1 mutations) in metastases irrespective of the metastatic site. The somatic mutational composition was significantly associated with cancer-specific survival (p(logrank) = 0.03). Moreover, we identified in 34 patients at least one drug target gene as well as clinically relevant mutations listed in the VICC Meta-Knowledgebase in 7%. In addition to significantly higher mutational burden in recurrent metastases compared to earlier ones, synchronous and/or recurrent metastases of individual patients, even after a time-period >2 yrs, shared a high proportion of somatic events. Our data demonstrate the importance of somatic profiling in metastases for precision medicine in RCC.

Funder

Robert Bosch Stiftung

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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