Clinical genomic profiling in the management of patients with soft tissue and bone sarcoma
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Published:2022-06-15
Issue:1
Volume:13
Page:
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ISSN:2041-1723
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Container-title:Nature Communications
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Commun
Author:
Gounder Mrinal M., Agaram Narasimhan P., Trabucco Sally E.ORCID, Robinson Victoria, Ferraro Richard A.ORCID, Millis Sherri Z.ORCID, Krishnan Anita, Lee Jessica, Attia Steven, Abida Wassim, Drilon AlexanderORCID, Chi Ping, Angelo Sandra P. D’ORCID, Dickson Mark A., Keohan Mary Lou, Kelly Ciara M.ORCID, Agulnik Mark, Chawla Sant P., Choy EdwinORCID, Chugh Rashmi, Meyer Christian F., Myer Parvathi A., Moore Jessica L., Okimoto Ross A., Pollock Raphael E.ORCID, Ravi Vinod, Singh Arun S., Somaiah NeetaORCID, Wagner Andrew J., Healey John H.ORCID, Frampton Garrett M.ORCID, Venstrom Jeffrey M., Ross Jeffrey S.ORCID, Ladanyi Marc, Singer Samuel, Brennan Murray F.ORCID, Schwartz Gary K., Lazar Alexander J.ORCID, Thomas David M.ORCID, Maki Robert G.ORCID, Tap William D., Ali Siraj M., Jin Dexter X.
Abstract
AbstractThere are more than 70 distinct sarcomas, and this diversity complicates the development of precision-based therapeutics for these cancers. Prospective comprehensive genomic profiling could overcome this challenge by providing insight into sarcomas’ molecular drivers. Through targeted panel sequencing of 7494 sarcomas representing 44 histologies, we identify highly recurrent and type-specific alterations that aid in diagnosis and treatment decisions. Sequencing could lead to refinement or reassignment of 10.5% of diagnoses. Nearly one-third of patients (31.7%) harbor potentially actionable alterations, including a significant proportion (2.6%) with kinase gene rearrangements; 3.9% have a tumor mutational burden ≥10 mut/Mb. We describe low frequencies of microsatellite instability (<0.3%) and a high degree of genome-wide loss of heterozygosity (15%) across sarcomas, which are not readily explained by homologous recombination deficiency (observed in 2.5% of cases). In a clinically annotated subset of 118 patients, we validate actionable genetic events as therapeutic targets. Collectively, our findings reveal the genetic landscape of human sarcomas, which may inform future development of therapeutics and improve clinical outcomes for patients with these rare cancers.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary
Reference98 articles.
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