| Literature DB >> 26554380 |
Lei Bao1, Karen Messer1,2, Richard Schwab3, Olivier Harismendy4, Minya Pu1, Brian Crain1, Shawn Yost1, Kelly A Frazer4, Brinda Rana5, Farnaz Hasteh6, Anne Wallace7, Barbara A Parker3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Synchronous tumors can be independent primary tumors or a primary-metastatic (clonal) pair, which may have clinical implications. Mutational profiling of tumor DNA is increasingly common in the clinic. We investigated whether mutational profiling can distinguish independent from clonal tumors in breast and other cancers, using a carefully defined test based on the Clonal Likelihood Score (CLS = 100 x # shared high confidence (HC) mutations/ # total HC mutations).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26554380 PMCID: PMC4640562 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0142487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
p 0. Here, p is the maximum rate of shared mutations expected to be called among independent tumor pairs, either from chance occurrence of true shared mutations, such as driver mutations, or from false positive (FP) calls from a given sequencing technology. In order for the CLS to have acceptable specificity and control of Type I error, p must be set at an appropriate empirically determined rate, as discussed below. The CLS test rejects the hypothesis of independence in favor of clonal status if CLS > c/n, where c is the critical value from an exact one-sided binomial test at the 5% significance level with parameters n and p (Table 1). We recommend reporting Clopper-Pearson exact two-sided confidence intervals [26] for the CLS, along with the observed p-value. The power of the CLS test to detect a truly clonal pair will depend on the total number of mutations n, and the expected proportion of shared mutations among clonal pairs, denoted as p .
The critical value for the CLS test (alpha = 0.05) and the number of total mutations needed to achieve 80% power.
| p0 (Rate of shared HC mutations in independent tumor pairs) | pa (Rate of shared HC mutations in clonal tumor pairs) | n (Total # of HC mutations needed to achieve 80% power) | c (Critical value for X in CLS test)) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3% | 10% | 66 | 5 |
| 3% | 15% | 36 | 4 |
| 3% | 20% | 21 | 3 |
| 4% | 10% | 101 | 8 |
| 4% | 15% | 44 | 5 |
| 4% | 20% | 21 | 3 |
Table 1 Caption: Computations based on an exact binominal distribution under reasonable assumptions on p the background rate of called shared mutations in independent tumor pairs, and p the expected rate of called shared mutations in clonal tumor pairs. Under recommended assumptions, at least 44 called HC mutations are needed to implement the CLS test. The appropriate values of p and p will depend on the sequencing technology and tumor type and should be chosen prior to conducting the CLS test. The CLS test rejects the hypothesis of independence in favor of clonal status if CLS > c/n,
Tumor sample characteristics for two cases of Synchronous Bilateral Breast Cancer (SBBC).
| Patient | Sample ID | Histology | Phenotype | Cellularity (Estimated by pathologist) | Cellularity (Estimated by absCNseq) | Ploidy (Estimated by absCNseq) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | PT1TN | Invasive ductal carcinoma (apocrine ca) | TN | ~70% | 47% | 3.43 |
| Patient 1 | PT1HR+ | Invasive lobular carcinoma (pleomorphic) | ER+/HER2- | ~40% | 31% | 3.06 |
| Patient 2 | PT2TN | Invasive ductal carcinoma | TN | ~70% | 77% | 1.88 |
| Patient 2 | PT2HR+ | Invasive lobular carcinoma | ER+/HER2- | ~70% | 56% | 2.34 |
Number of shared and private high confidence (HC) somatic mutations and Clonal Likelihood Score in two SBBC tumor pairs, identified from exome sequencing and stringent filtering.
| Private HC mutations:TN specific | Private HC mutations: HR+ specific | Shared HC mutations | Total HC mutations in tumor pair | Clonal Likelihood Score (CLS) (Before validation) | Clonal Likelihood Score (CLS) (After validation) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | 12 | 0 | 50 | 62 | 81% (50/62) | 100% (51/51) |
| Patient 2 | 103 | 79 | 2 | 184 | 1% (2/184) | 0% (0/182) |
Fig 1Distinct patterns of mutant allelic fraction for two tumor pairs.
Left panel, Patient 1, clonal; right panel, Patient 2, independent. Each dot represents a HC shared mutation identified from exome sequencing and stringent filtering, with the proportion of alternatively called alleles plotted on the y-axis for the HR+ tumor and on the x-axis for the TN tumor. The x’s represent additional loci sent for resequencing in the validation assay to confirm negative calls for shared mutations. Y-axis: HR+ tumor; x-axis: TN tumor. Red dots: HC shared mutations, confirmed by the targeted deep sequencing validation assay. Red crosses: mutations called as HC private mutations, validated as true shared mutations. Green dots: putative HC mutations determined to be false positives by the validation assay. Blue color: the validation assay failed in at least one tissue (germline or 2 tumors). Black dots: private HC somatic mutations not sent for validation. Green crosses: low-confidence potential SNV’s selected for validation (>5% prevalence in both tumors), all confirmed to be sequencing artifacts (no alternate allele detected in either germline or tumor DNA by validation assay). For both patients, the false positive calls (green dots) are observed to be separate from the other called mutations. For patient 1, where all validated mutations were confirmed as shared, the false negative calls for shared mutations are seen to be shared mutations present at low allelic fraction (Fig 1 left, red crosses). For patient 2, all validated mutations were called as private. The confirmed negative loci (Fig 1 right, green crosses) were all low-confidence possible SNV’s which validated as germline homozygous reference. The distinct patterns seen in the figures again suggest that the tumors from patient 1 were clonal and while those from patient 2 arose independently.
Fig 2Copy number alterations potentially changing the ER status of the clonal tumors from Patient 1.
Upper panel: Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) profiles on chromosome arm 6q. Two separated bands of allele fractions along the chromosome, a typical consequence of LOH, is clearly seen in TN tumor (red dots) but is less evident in HR+ tumor (green dots) due to low cellularity of the sample. Rectangle delimits the centromere and the blue arrow points to the ER locus. Middle and lower panel: segmented log copy ratio profiles on chromosome 6 for the HR+ and TN tumor respectively, produced by copy number package [33]. One copy loss of distal end of 6q encapsulating the ER locus (blue arrow) is seen in the TN tumor but not in HR+ tumor. A plausible evolutionary sequence is an initial copy neutral LOH affecting the entire 6q chromosome arm in the primary tumor followed by a new deletion at the ESR1 locus, which reduced ER expression in the metastatic TN tumor.