Spatial and temporal intratumour heterogeneity has potential consequences for single biopsy-based neuroblastoma treatment decisions

Author:

Schmelz Karin,Toedling JoernORCID,Huska MattORCID,Cwikla Maja C.ORCID,Kruetzfeldt Louisa-MarieORCID,Proba Jutta,Ambros Peter F.,Ambros Inge M.,Boral Sengül,Lodrini Marco,Chen Celine Y.ORCID,Burkert Martin,Guergen Dennis,Szymansky AnnabellORCID,Astrahantseff KathyORCID,Kuenkele Annette,Haase KerstinORCID,Fischer MatthiasORCID,Deubzer Hedwig E.ORCID,Hertwig FalkORCID,Hundsdoerfer Patrick,Henssen Anton G.ORCID,Schwarz Roland F.ORCID,Schulte Johannes H.ORCID,Eggert AngelikaORCID

Abstract

AbstractIntratumour heterogeneity is a major cause of treatment failure in cancer. We present in-depth analyses combining transcriptomic and genomic profiling with ultra-deep targeted sequencing of multiregional biopsies in 10 patients with neuroblastoma, a devastating childhood tumour. We observe high spatial and temporal heterogeneity in somatic mutations and somatic copy-number alterations which are reflected on the transcriptomic level. Mutations in some druggable target genes including ALK and FGFR1 are heterogeneous at diagnosis and/or relapse, raising the issue whether current target prioritization and molecular risk stratification procedures in single biopsies are sufficiently reliable for therapy decisions. The genetic heterogeneity in gene mutations and chromosome aberrations observed in deep analyses from patient courses suggest clonal evolution before treatment and under treatment pressure, and support early emergence of metastatic clones and ongoing chromosomal instability during disease evolution. We report continuous clonal evolution on mutational and copy number levels in neuroblastoma, and detail its implications for therapy selection, risk stratification and therapy resistance.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Berlin Institute of Health (TERMINATE-NB CRG04 collaborative research project) and in the TransTumVar project

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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