Insights for precision oncology from the integration of genomic and clinical data of 13,880 tumors from the 100,000 Genomes Cancer Programme

Author:

Sosinsky Alona,Ambrose John,Cross WilliamORCID,Turnbull Clare,Henderson Shirley,Jones Louise,Hamblin Angela,Arumugam Prabhu,Chan Georgia,Chubb Daniel,Noyvert Boris,Mitchell Jonathan,Walker Susan,Bowman Katy,Pasko Dorota,Buongermino Pereira MariannaORCID,Volkova Nadezda,Rueda-Martin Antonio,Perez-Gil Daniel,Lopez Javier,Pullinger JohnORCID,Siddiq Afshan,Zainy Tala,Choudhury Tasnim,Yavorska Olena,Fowler Tom,Bentley David,Kingsley Clare,Hing Sandra,Deans Zandra,Rendon AugustoORCID,Hill Sue,Caulfield MarkORCID,Murugaesu NirupaORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe Cancer Programme of the 100,000 Genomes Project was an initiative to provide whole-genome sequencing (WGS) for patients with cancer, evaluating opportunities for precision cancer care within the UK National Healthcare System (NHS). Genomics England, alongside NHS England, analyzed WGS data from 13,880 solid tumors spanning 33 cancer types, integrating genomic data with real-world treatment and outcome data, within a secure Research Environment. Incidence of somatic mutations in genes recommended for standard-of-care testing varied across cancer types. For instance, in glioblastoma multiforme, small variants were present in 94% of cases and copy number aberrations in at least one gene in 58% of cases, while sarcoma demonstrated the highest occurrence of actionable structural variants (13%). Homologous recombination deficiency was identified in 40% of high-grade serous ovarian cancer cases with 30% linked to pathogenic germline variants, highlighting the value of combined somatic and germline analysis. The linkage of WGS and longitudinal life course clinical data allowed the assessment of treatment outcomes for patients stratified according to pangenomic markers. Our findings demonstrate the utility of linking genomic and real-world clinical data to enable survival analysis to identify cancer genes that affect prognosis and advance our understanding of how cancer genomics impacts patient outcomes.

Funder

Cancer Research UK

DH | National Institute for Health Research

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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