Evolutionary trajectories of small cell lung cancer under therapy
Author:
George JulieORCID, Maas LukasORCID, Abedpour NimaORCID, Cartolano Maria, Kaiser LauraORCID, Fischer Rieke N., Scheel Andreas H.ORCID, Weber Jan-Philipp, Hellmich MartinORCID, Bosco Graziella, Volz Caroline, Mueller Christian, Dahmen Ilona, John Felix, Alves Cleidson Padua, Werr LisaORCID, Panse Jens Peter, Kirschner Martin, Engel-Riedel Walburga, Jürgens Jessica, Stoelben Erich, Brockmann Michael, Grau StefanORCID, Sebastian Martin, Stratmann Jan A., Kern Jens, Hummel Horst-Dieter, Hegedüs BalazsORCID, Schuler MartinORCID, Plönes Till, Aigner ClemensORCID, Elter Thomas, Toepelt Karin, Ko Yon-Dschun, Kurz Sylke, Grohé Christian, Serke Monika, Höpker Katja, Hagmeyer Lars, Doerr Fabian, Hekmath Khosro, Strapatsas Judith, Kambartel Karl-Otto, Chakupurakal Geothy, Busch Annette, Bauernfeind Franz-Georg, Griesinger Frank, Luers Anne, Dirks Wiebke, Wiewrodt Rainer, Luecke Andrea, Rodermann Ernst, Diel Andreas, Hagen Volker, Severin Kai, Ullrich Roland T., Reinhardt Hans Christian, Quaas Alexander, Bogus Magdalena, Courts CorneliusORCID, Nürnberg PeterORCID, Becker KerstinORCID, Achter ViktorORCID, Büttner ReinhardORCID, Wolf Jürgen, Peifer MartinORCID, Thomas Roman K.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractThe evolutionary processes that underlie the marked sensitivity of small cell lung cancer (SCLC) to chemotherapy and rapid relapse are unknown1–3. Here we determined tumour phylogenies at diagnosis and throughout chemotherapy and immunotherapy by multiregion sequencing of 160 tumours from 65 patients. Treatment-naive SCLC exhibited clonal homogeneity at distinct tumour sites, whereas first-line platinum-based chemotherapy led to a burst in genomic intratumour heterogeneity and spatial clonal diversity. We observed branched evolution and a shift to ancestral clones underlying tumour relapse. Effective radio- or immunotherapy induced a re-expansion of founder clones with acquired genomic damage from first-line chemotherapy. Whereas TP53 and RB1 alterations were exclusively part of the common ancestor, MYC family amplifications were frequently not constituents of the founder clone. At relapse, emerging subclonal mutations affected key genes associated with SCLC biology, and tumours harbouring clonal CREBBP/EP300 alterations underwent genome duplications. Gene-damaging TP53 alterations and co-alterations of TP53 missense mutations with TP73, CREBBP/EP300 or FMN2 were significantly associated with shorter disease relapse following chemotherapy. In summary, we uncover key processes of the genomic evolution of SCLC under therapy, identify the common ancestor as the source of clonal diversity at relapse and show central genomic patterns associated with sensitivity and resistance to chemotherapy.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference55 articles.
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