Author:
Pan Jia-Ni,Li Pu-Chun,Wang Meng,Li Ming-Wei,Ding Xiao-Wen,Zhou Tao,Wang Hui-Na,Wang Yun-Kai,Chen Li-Bin,Wang Rong,Ye Wei-Wu,Wu Wei-Zhu,Lou Feng,Wang Xiao-Jia,Cao Wen-Ming
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
Our study aimed to develop and validate a homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) scoring algorithm in the Chinese breast cancer population.
Methods and materials
Ninety-six in-house breast cancer (BC) samples and 6 HRD-positive standard cells were analyzed by whole-genome sequencing (WGS). Besides, 122 BCs from the TCGA database were down-sampled to ~ 1X WGS. We constructed an algorithm named AcornHRD for HRD score calculated based on WGS at low coverage as input data to estimate large-scale copy number alteration (LCNA) events on the genome. A clinical cohort of 50 BCs (15 cases carrying BRCA mutation) was used to assess the association between HRD status and anthracyclines-based neoadjuvant treatment outcomes.
Results
A 100-kb window was defined as the optimal size using 41 in-house cases and the TCGA dataset. HRD score high threshold was determined as HRD score ≥ 10 using 55 in-house BCs with BRCA mutation to achieve a 95% BRCA-positive agreement rate. Furthermore, the HRD status agreement rate of AcornHRD is 100%, while the ShallowHRD is 60% in standard cells. BRCA mutation was significantly associated with a high HRD score evaluated by AcornHRD and ShallowHRD (p = 0.008 and p = 0.003, respectively) in the TCGA dataset. However, AcornHRD showed a higher positive agreement rate than did the ShallowHRD algorithm (70% vs 60%). In addition, the BRCA-positive agreement rate of AcornHRD was superior to that of ShallowHRD (87% vs 13%) in the clinical cohort. Importantly, the high HRD score assessed by AcornHRD was significantly correlated with a residual cancer burden score of 0 or 1 (RCB0/1). Besides, the HRD-positive group was more likely to respond to anthracycline-based chemotherapy than the HRD-negative group (pCR [OR = 9.5, 95% CI 1.11–81.5, p = 0.040] and RCB0/1 [OR = 10.29, 95% CI 2.02–52.36, p = 0.005]).
Conclusion
Using the AcornHRD algorithm evaluation, our analysis demonstrated the high performance of the LCNA genomic signature for HRD detection in breast cancers.
Funder
Medical and Health Research Project of Zhejiang Province
The fourth round of Ningbo Key Medical Discipline
Key Research and Development Program of Zhejiang Province
Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC