AI Article Synopsis

  • Metastatic prostate cancer has genomic alterations that are not fully understood, so researchers analyzed 493 cases from the TCGA database and sequenced plasma from 95 samples of 43 patients.
  • The study identified significant driver changes in nearly all cases, including gene fusions, deletions, and amplifications, such as TMPRSS2:ERG and PTEN.
  • They found that about 40% of patients showed changes in genomic amplifications over time, indicating rapid adaptations in the tumor's genetics, suggesting that these changes help drive cancer progression.

Article Abstract

Genomic alterations in metastatic prostate cancer remain incompletely characterized. Here we analyse 493 prostate cancer cases from the TCGA database and perform whole-genome plasma sequencing on 95 plasma samples derived from 43 patients with metastatic prostate cancer. From these samples, we identify established driver aberrations in a cancer-related gene in nearly all cases (97.7%), including driver gene fusions (TMPRSS2:ERG), driver focal deletions (PTEN, RYBP and SHQ1) and driver amplifications (AR and MYC). In serial plasma analyses, we observe changes in focal amplifications in 40% of cases. The mean time interval between new amplifications was 26.4 weeks (range: 5-52 weeks), suggesting that they represent rapid adaptations to selection pressure. An increase in neuron-specific enolase is accompanied by clonal pattern changes in the tumour genome, most consistent with subclonal diversification of the tumour. Our findings suggest a high plasticity of prostate cancer genomes with newly occurring focal amplifications as a driving force in progression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4917969PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12008DOI Listing

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