| Literature DB >> 26757983 |
Fiona S Togneri1, Douglas G Ward2, Joseph M Foster3, Adam J Devall2, Paula Wojtowicz1, Sofia Alyas1, Fabiana Ramos Vasques1, Assa Oumie3, Nicholas D James4, K K Cheng5, Maurice P Zeegers6, Nayneeta Deshmukh2, Brendan O'Sullivan7, Philippe Taniere7, Karen G Spink3, Dominic J McMullan1, Mike Griffiths1, Richard T Bryan2.
Abstract
Urothelial bladder cancers (UBCs) have heterogeneous clinical characteristics that are mirrored in their diverse genomic profiles. Genomic profiling of UBCs has the potential to benefit routine clinical practice by providing prognostic utility above and beyond conventional clinicopathological factors, and allowing for prediction and surveillance of treatment responses. Urinary DNAs representative of the tumour genome provide a promising resource as a liquid biopsy for non-invasive genomic profiling of UBCs. We compared the genomic profiles of urinary cellular DNA and cell-free DNA (cfDNA) from the urine with matched diagnostic formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tumour DNAs for 23 well-characterised UBC patients. Our data show urinary DNAs to be highly representative of patient tumours, allowing for detection of recurrent clinically actionable genomic aberrations. Furthermore, a greater aberrant load (indicative of tumour genome) was observed in cfDNA over cellular DNA (P<0.001), resulting in a higher analytical sensitivity for detection of clinically actionable genomic aberrations (P<0.04) when using cfDNA. Thus, cfDNA extracted from the urine of UBC patients has a higher tumour genome burden and allows greater detection of key genomic biomarkers (90%) than cellular DNA from urine (61%) and provides a promising resource for robust whole-genome tumour profiling of UBC with potential to influence clinical decisions without invasive patient interventions.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26757983 PMCID: PMC4970693 DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2015.281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246
Tumour staging data for 23 patients with UBC together with information on TARGET aberrations identified
| 1 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 2 | NA | KIT amp; CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | |
| Urine supernatant | 2 | 100 | KIT amp; CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | NA | NA | NA | DNA insufficient for OncoScan | |||
| 2 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 5 | NA | AKT2 amp; CDK4 amp; MCL1 amp; MDM2 amp; RAF1 amp | |
| Urine supernatant | 5 | 100 | AKT2 amp; CDK4 amp; MCL1 amp; MDM2 amp; RAF1 amp | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 0 | 0 | NA | ||||
| 3 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 3 | NA | PIK3CA:c.1633G>A (p.(E545K)); PIK3CA:c.1624G>A (p.(E542K)); CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | Differences in somatic mutations identified in urine and FFPE samples highlights tumour heterogeneity. Mutations in urine cfDNA consistent with FFPE sections from deeper tumour material (data not shown) |
| Urine supernatant | 3 | 67 | PIK3CA:c.1633G>A (p.(E545K)); TP53:c.524G>A (p.(R175H)); CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 3 | 67 | PIK3CA:c.1633G>A (p.(E545K)); TP53:p.R175H; TP53:c.524G>A (p.(R175H)) CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | ||||
| 4 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 0 | NA | Clear and consistent CN aberrations evident for both cfDNA and FFPE DNA | |
| Urine supernatant | 0 | NA | |||||
| Urine cell pellet | 0 | NA | |||||
| 5 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 12 | NA | AKT2 amp; AURKA amp; BRAF amp; CCND3 amp; CCNE1 amp; CDK6 amp; CRKL amp; EGFR amp; FGFR1 amp; MAPK1 amp; MCL1 amp; MET amp | |
| Urine supernatant | 12 | 100 | AKT2 amp; AURKA amp; BRAF amp; CCND3 amp; CCNE1 amp; CDK6 amp; CRKL amp; EGFR amp; FGFR1 amp; MAPK1 amp; MCL1 amp; MET amp | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 0 | 0 | Apparently representative of germline genome only | ||||
| 6 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | NA | NA | DNA insufficient for OncoScan | |
| Urine supernatant | 1 | 100 | MCL1 amp | In absence of FFPE results, assume cfDNA to be representative of tumour | |||
| Urine cell pellet | 0 | 0 | Apparently representative of germline genome only | ||||
| 7 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 0 | NA | Quality insufficient to call aberrations | |
| Urine supernatant | 2 | 100 | CCND1 amp; CCNE1 amp | In absence of FFPE results, assume urine DNA aberrations to be representative of tumour | |||
| Urine cell pellet | 2 | 100 | CCND1 amp; CCNE1 amp | In absence of FFPE results, assume urine DNA aberrations to be representative of tumour | |||
| 8 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 3 | NA | FGFR1 amp; MYC amp; PIK3CA:c.3140A>G (p.(H1047R)) | |
| Urine supernatant | 3 | 100 | FGFR1 amp; MYC amp; PIK3CA:c.3140A>G (p.(H1047R)) | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 1 | 33 | PIK3CA:c.3140A>G (p.(H1047R)) | ||||
| 9 | pTa | G1 | FFPE tumour sections | 0 | NA | ||
| Urine supernatant | 0 | NA | |||||
| Urine cell pellet | 0 | NA | |||||
| 10 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 0 | NA | ||
| Urine supernatant | 0 | NA | |||||
| Urine cell pellet | NA | NA | DNA insufficient for OncoScan | ||||
| 11 | pTa | G2 | FFPE tumour sections | 1 | NA | CDKN2A biallelic loss | |
| Urine supernatant | NA | NA | Quality of OncoScan data too poor for accurate analysis | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | NA | NA | DNA insufficient for OncoScan | ||||
| 12 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 1 | NA | TP53:c.844C>T (p.(R282W)) | |
| Urine supernatant | 1 | 100 | TP53:c.844C>T (p.(R282W)) | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 1 | 100 | TP53:c.844C>T (p.(R282W)) | ||||
| 13 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 3 | NA | CCND1 amp; CDK4 amp; MDM2 amp | |
| Urine supernatant | 3 | 100 | CCND1 amp; CDK4 amp; MDM2 amp | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 3 | 100 | CCND1 amp; CDK4 amp; MDM2 amp | ||||
| 14 | pTa | G1 | FFPE tumour sections | 1 | NA | PIK3CA:c.3140A>G (p.(H1047R)) | |
| Urine supernatant | 1 | 100 | PIK3CA:c.3140A>G (p.(H1047R)) | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 1 | 100 | PIK3CA:c.3140A>G (p.(H1047R)) | ||||
| 15 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 1 | NA | EGFR amp | |
| Urine supernatant | 0 | 0 | |||||
| Urine cell pellet | 0 | 0 | |||||
| 16 | pT1 | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 8 | NA | BRAF amp; CCND3 amp; CDK6 amp; EGFR amp; MAPK3 amp; MET amp; MYC amp; RAF1 amp | |
| Urine supernatant | 8 | 100 | BRAF amp; CCND3 amp; CDK6 amp; EGFR amp; MAPK3 amp; MET amp; MYC amp; RAF1 amp | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 4 | 50 | CCND3 amp; MAPK3 amp; MYC amp; RAF1 amp | ||||
| 17 | pT1 | G2 | FFPE tumour sections | 1 | NA | CCND1 amp | |
| Urine supernatant | 1 | 100 | CCND1 amp | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 1 | 100 | CCND1 amp | ||||
| 18 | pT2+ | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 4 | NA | CCNE1 amp; RAF1 amp; CDKN2A/B biallelic loss; PIK3CA:c.1624G>A (p.(E542K)) | |
| Urine supernatant | 4 | 100 | CCNE1 amp; RAF1 amp; CDKN2A/B biallelic loss; PIK3CA:c.1624G>A (p.(E542K)) | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 4 | 100 | CCNE1 amp; RAF1 amp; CDKN2A/B biallelic loss; PIK3CA:c.1624G>A (p.(E542K)) | ||||
| 19 | pT2+ | G2 | FFPE tumour sections | 3 | NA | CCND1 amp; CDKN2A/B biallelic loss; TSC1 biallelic loss | |
| Urine supernatant | 2 | 67 | CCND1 amp; CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 2 | 67 | CCND1 amp; CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | ||||
| 20 | pTa | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 0 | NA | ||
| Urine supernatant | 0 | NA | |||||
| Urine cell pellet | NA | NA | DNA insufficient for OncoScan | ||||
| 21 | pTa | G1 | FFPE tumour sections | 0 | NA | ||
| Urine supernatant | 0 | NA | |||||
| Urine cell pellet | 0 | NA | |||||
| 22 | pTa | G3 | FFPE tumour sections | 1 | NA | CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | |
| Urine supernatant | 1 | 100 | CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | NA | NA | DNA insufficient for OncoScan | ||||
| 23 | pT1 | G2 | FFPE tumour sections | 1 | NA | CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | |
| Urine supernatant | 1 | 100 | CDKN2A/B biallelic loss | ||||
| Urine cell pellet | 1 | 100 | CDKN2A/B biallelic loss |
Abbreviations: FFPE, formalin-fixed paraffin embedded; NA, not applicable.
Analytical sensitivity (for detection of FFPE-identified aberrations) is indicated. CN probes are mapped to Genome Reference Consortium human genome build 37 (GRCh37). Reference sequences used for somatic mutations listed are TP53 (NM_000546.5) and PIK3CA (NM_006218.2).
Figure 1Example of genomic profiles from DNAs extracted from FFPE and cellular and cfDNA from the urine from patient 23 with a stage G2 pT1 NMIBC. Comparison of profiles shows consistent aberrations identified in all three samples (red=loss, blue=gain and yellow=LOH). Aberrations from all three sources show homozygous loss at 9p21.3 including CDKN2A/B; listed in the TARGET database. Biallelic inactivation of CDKN2A/B may predict response to CDK4/6 inhibitors for this patient.
Figure 2By examining the BAF plots of the SNP probes for patient 13, the highest aberrant cell load for this patient is observed in cfDNA (greatest separation in bottom plots). The number of TARGET aberrations (3; amplifications of CCND1 (may predict sensitivity to CDK4/6 inhibitors), MDM2 (may predict sensitivity to Nutlins and MDM2 inhibitors) and CDK4 (may predict sensitivity to CDK4/6 inhibitors)) is consistent across all sample types. A degree of tumour heterogeneity is also clear.
Figure 3Patient 7. DNAs extracted from urine provide improved quality genomic data and clearer characterisation of the tumour profile than DNA from FFPE tumour material, despite repeat slides being cut and extracted. Two TARGET aberrations (CCND1 amplification (may predict sensitivity to CDK4/6 inhibitors) and CCNE1 amplification (may predict sensitivity to CDK2 inhibitors)) were observed in both cfDNA and urinary cellular DNA however none of these aberrations were independently called in two separate DNAs from FFPE tumour material.
Figure 4Genomic profile from urinary cfDNA of non-UBC patient with prostatic duct carcinoma confirms that detection of a tumour genome in urinary DNA is not bladder cancer specific. Red lines highlight regions of CN loss with resulting loss of heterozygosity indicated by yellow colouring of the chromosomal regions. Blue and red arrows indicate sub-microscopic germline CN gains and losses, respectively.