Lower Exome Sequencing Coverage of Ancestrally African Patients in The Cancer Genome Atlas

Author:

Wickland Daniel P1,Sherman Mark E1,Radisky Derek C2,Mansfield Aaron S34ORCID,Asmann Yan W14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Mayo Clinic , Jacksonville, FL, USA

2. Department of Cancer Biology, Mayo Clinic , Jacksonville, FL, USA

3. Division of Medical Oncology, Department of Oncology, Mayo Clinic , Rochester, MN, USA

4. Precision Cancer Therapeutics, Mayo Clinic Center for Individualized Medicine , Rochester, MN, USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundIn the United States, cancer disproportionately impacts Black and African American individuals. Identifying genetic factors underlying cancer disparities has been an important research focus and requires data that are equitable in both quantity and quality across racial groups. It is widely recognized that DNA databases quantitatively underrepresent minorities. However, the differences in data quality between racial groups have not been well studied.MethodsWe compared the qualities of germline and tumor exomes between ancestrally African and European patients in The Cancer Genome Atlas of 7 cancers with at least 50 self-reported Black patients in the context of sequencing depth, tumor purity, and qualities of germline variants and somatic mutations.ResultsGermline and tumor exomes from ancestrally African patients were sequenced at statistically significantly lower depth in 6 out of the 7 cancers. For 3 cancers, most ancestrally European exomes were sequenced in early sample batches at higher depth, whereas ancestrally African exomes were concentrated in later batches and sequenced at much lower depth. For the other 3 cancers, the reasons of lower sequencing coverage of ancestrally African exomes remain unknown. Furthermore, even when the sequencing depths were comparable, African exomes had disproportionally higher percentages of positions with insufficient coverage, likely because of the known European bias in the human reference genome that impacted exome capture kit design.ConclusionsOverall and positional lower sequencing depths of ancestrally African exomes in The Cancer Genome Atlas led to underdetection and lower quality of variants, highlighting the need to consider epidemiological factors for future genomics studies.

Funder

Mayo Clinic Center for Individualized Medicine at Jacksonville Florida

Mayo Clinic Research Committee

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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