Author:
Brown Leanne M.,Hagenson Ryan A.,Sheltzer Jason M.
Abstract
ABSTRACTIn the United States, Black individuals have higher rates of cancer mortality than any other racial or ethnic group. The sources of these significant racial disparities are not fully understood, and may include social, environmental, and genetic factors that influence cancer onset, diagnosis, and treatment. Here, we examined genomic data from several large-scale cancer patient cohorts to search for racial associations in chromosome copy number alterations. We found that tumors from Black patients were significantly more likely to exhibit whole-genome duplications (WGDs), a genomic event that enhances metastasis and aggressive disease, compared to tumors from white patients. Among patients with WGD-positive cancers, there was no significant difference in survival between Black and white patients, suggesting that the increased incidence of WGD events could contribute to the disparities in patient outcome. Genomic analysis identified several somatic alterations associated with WGD events that were consistent between Black and white populations, indicating that the increase in WGD events may be driven by environmental or epigenetic factors in Black patients. In total, these findings identify a class of genomic alterations that may influence racial disparities in cancer patient outcome. As cancers that have undergone WGD events exhibit unique genetic vulnerabilities, therapies that selectively target WGD-positive cancers may be particularly effective at treating aggressive malignancies in Black patients.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory