Akira Ohtsu, Yusuke Otani, Seiji Arai, Anna Rogachevskaya, Vanessa D Chin, Shinichi Toyooka, Kazuhiro Suzuki, Wenyi Wei, Atsushi Tanaka
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Metastatic bladder urothelial carcinoma has poor survival, and large comparative genomic studies using uniform targeted sequencing of paired primary and metastatic lesions remain limited. We compared gene- and pathway-level alterations between primary and metastatic tumors METHODS: We analyzed 2,880 bladder urothelial carcinoma samples (2,305 primary; 575 metastatic) from 2,343 patients profiled with MSK-IMPACT. Somatic mutations and copy number alterations were integrated per gene and compared between primary and metastatic samples in the full cohort and in a paired subset using standard statistical tests.
Results: Primary and metastatic samples showed broadly similar driver landscapes. In the full cohort, KDM6A, FGFR3, STAG2, and ERCC2 were more frequently altered in primary tumors, whereas no individual genes were enriched in metastases; these differences were not significant in paired analyses. At the pathway level, TP53 pathway alterations were relatively more frequent in metastases, while DNA damage response alterations were enriched in primary tumors; other pathways showed comparable alteration rates. Apoptosis-focused analyses identified no significant gene-level differences, but suggested a trend toward higher alteration rates in the TP53 pathway and apoptosis regulators in metastases.
Conclusion: Primary and metastatic lesions of bladder urothelial carcinoma show broadly similar gene- and pathway-level alteration profiles on targeted DNA sequencing. TP53 pathway and apoptosis-related alterations are modestly more frequent in metastases, consistent with impaired stress responses and apoptosis evasion.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Clinical Oncology (IJCO) welcomes original research papers on all aspects of clinical oncology that report the results of novel and timely investigations. Reports on clinical trials are encouraged. Experimental studies will also be accepted if they have obvious relevance to clinical oncology. Membership in the Japan Society of Clinical Oncology is not a prerequisite for submission to the journal. Papers are received on the understanding that: their contents have not been published in whole or in part elsewhere; that they are subject to peer review by at least two referees and the Editors, and to editorial revision of the language and contents; and that the Editors are responsible for their acceptance, rejection, and order of publication.