| Literature DB >> 32929369 |
Liyan Xue1,2, Weihua Li1, Xinyi Fan3, Zitong Zhao3, Wei Zhou3, Zhimin Feng3, Linxiu Liu1, Hua Lin4, Lin Li5, Xuemin Xue1, Xuanlin Huang3, Peide Huang3, Jia Guo3, Peina Du3, Ning Lu1, Lin Li5, Qimin Zhan3,6, Yongmei Song3.
Abstract
Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) patients with a synchronous or metachronous lung tumor can be diagnosed with lung metastasis (LM) or a second primary tumor (SPT), but the accurate discrimination between LM and SPT remains a clinical dilemma. This study aimed to investigate the feasibility of using the whole-exome sequencing (WES) technique to distinguish SPT from LM.Entities:
Keywords: clonal relationship; esophageal squamous cell carcinoma; lung metastasis; second primary tumor; whole-exome sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32929369 PMCID: PMC7482800 DOI: 10.7150/thno.45311
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Clinicopathological features of 14 patients with double SCCs.
| Patient ID | Gender | Age | Synchronous/metachronous | Tumor ID | Tumor location | Interval time (months) | Follow-up (months) | Pathological diagnosis | Molecular diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | Male | 43 | Metachronous | T | Esophagus | 26 | Deceased (10) | Metastasis | Metastasis |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P2 | Male | 49 | Synchronous | T | Esophagus | 0 | Deceased (3) | Metastasis | Metastasis |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P3 | Male | 73 | Synchronous | T | Esophagus | 0 | Deceased (35) | Metastasis | Primary |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P4 | Male | 42 | Metachronous | T | Esophagus | 12 | Alive (90) | Metastasis | Primary |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P5 | Male | 54 | Synchronous | T | Esophagus | 4 | Deceased (26) | Metastasis | Metastasis |
| D | Kidney | ||||||||
| P6 | Male | 67 | Synchronous | T | Esophagus | 0 | Deceased (23) | Metastasis | Metastasis |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P7 | Male | 55 | Synchronous | T | Esophagus | 0 | Deceased (25) | Metastasis | Metastasis |
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P8 | Male | 50 | Synchronous | T | Esophagus | 5 | Alive (3) | Metastasis | Metastasis |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Brain | ||||||||
| P9 | Male | 56 | Metachronous | T | Esophagus | 18 | Alive (53) | Metastasis | Metastasis |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P10 | Male | 58 | Synchronous | T | Esophagus | 0 | Alive (13) | Metastasis | Primary |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P11 | Male | 80 | Synchronous | T | Esophagus | 0 | Alive (3) | Metastasis | Metastasis |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P12 | Male | 62 | Synchronous | T | Esophagus | 0 | Alive (12) | Metastasis | Primary |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P13 | Male | 49 | Metachronous | T | Esophagus | 36 | Alive (41) | Metastasis | Metastasis |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung | ||||||||
| P14 | Male | 61 | Synchronous | T | Esophagus | 0 | Deceased (20) | Metastasis | Primary |
| LN | LN | ||||||||
| D | Lung |
Figure 1The distribution of nonsynonymous somatic mutations among different tumors. (A) Venn diagrams showing the distribution of nonsynonymous somatic mutations among different tumors within the same patient in P5 and P8 (external controls). (B) Venn diagrams showing the distribution of nonsynonymous somatic mutations among different tumors within the same patient in P1, P2, P6, P7, P9, P11 and P13 (group 1). (C) Venn diagrams showing the distribution of nonsynonymous somatic mutations among different tumors within the same patient in P3, P4, P10, P12 and P14 (group 2).
Figure 2Relationship of different tumors from one patient based on somatic mutated genes. (A) Heatmaps (left) and phylogenetic trees (right) showing the relationship of different tumors from one patient based on somatic mutated genes in P5 and P8 (external controls). (B) Heatmaps (left) and phylogenetic trees (right) showing the relationship of different tumors from one patient based on somatic mutated genes in P1, P2, P6, P7, P9, P11 and P13 (group 1). (C) Heatmaps (left) and phylogenetic trees (right) showing the relationship of different tumors from one patient based on somatic mutated genes in P3, P4, P10, P12 and P14 (group 2). Trunk, branch and private mutations are illustrated in the heatmaps.
Figure 3Summary of significantly mutated genes (SMGs) in the 14 ESCC patients. Commonly mutated genes in at least two patients are listed. Top: total point mutations and indels. Bottom: presence or absence (gray) of SMGs in each tumor.
Figure 4Mutation spectra and contributions of signatures in patients with double SCCs. (A) Mutation spectra of all tumors in the external controls, group 1 and group 2. (B) The contribution of signatures to T, LN and D tumors in the external controls, group 1 and group 2. S1-30 are the signatures in the COSMIC database. Each dot represents one tumor and bars represent mean values.
Figure 5The profiles of focal somatic copy-number alterations (SCNAs). (A) Distribution of focal SCNAs in all tumors. Red: SCNA gain; blue: SCNA loss. (B) The distribution of cosine similarity between T and LN tumors, as well as between T and D tumors in each group.
Figure 6Twelve patients with double SCCs of the esophagus and lung diagnosed as lung metastasis (LM) using pathological information are subjected to WES, but 5 patients (41.7%) are considered second primary tumors (SPTs) according to the WES-based molecular analysis.