Understanding metastasis mixed-treatment responses through genomic analyses.

IF 6.5 2区 医学 Q1 ONCOLOGY
Susana Garcia-Recio, Paola Zagami, Brooke M Felsheim, Amy Wheless, Kerry Thomas, Renato Trimarchi, Lisa A Carey, Charles M Perou
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Early-stage and metastatic breast cancers (MBC) can exhibit genomic heterogeneity, even within the same individual. Response to therapy in metastatic breast cancer patients with multiple metastases can also be heterogeneous, with different degrees of responsiveness to the same drug(s) across metastatic sites, termed "mixed response," within the same patient. Whether this treatment response variability is influenced by factors such as intrinsic tumor characteristics of metastatic lesions and/or the microenvironment is unknown. Through genomic analysis of multiple metastases from the same patient, assayed in 6 different patients who had exhibited mixed response on imaging, we identified that higher regulatory T cells (T reg) and CDKN2A gene expression values correlate with non-response, while the KRAS gene, KRAS amplicon, and CD8T cells were associated with response in individual metastases. These genomic features may explain mixed clinical responses and provide valuable insights into intrapatient variations in treatment sensitivity.

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来源期刊
NPJ Breast Cancer
NPJ Breast Cancer Medicine-Pharmacology (medical)
CiteScore
10.10
自引率
1.70%
发文量
122
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: npj Breast Cancer publishes original research articles, reviews, brief correspondence, meeting reports, editorial summaries and hypothesis generating observations which could be unexplained or preliminary findings from experiments, novel ideas, or the framing of new questions that need to be solved. Featured topics of the journal include imaging, immunotherapy, molecular classification of disease, mechanism-based therapies largely targeting signal transduction pathways, carcinogenesis including hereditary susceptibility and molecular epidemiology, survivorship issues including long-term toxicities of treatment and secondary neoplasm occurrence, the biophysics of cancer, mechanisms of metastasis and their perturbation, and studies of the tumor microenvironment.
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