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1.
Radiother Oncol ; 197: 110364, 2024 Jun 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38834154

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Current radiotherapy guidelines rely heavily on imaging-based monitoring. Liquid biopsy monitoring promises to complement imaging by providing frequent systemic information about the tumor. In particular, cell-free DNA (cfDNA) sequencing offers a tumor-agnostic approach, which lends itself to monitoring heterogeneous cohorts of cancer patients. METHODS: We collected plasma cfDNA from oligometastatic patients (OMD) and head-and-neck cancer patients (SCCHN) at six time points before, during, and after radiotherapy, and compared them to the plasma samples of healthy and polymetastatic volunteers. We performed low-pass (on average 7x) whole-genome sequencing on 93 plasma cfDNA samples and correlated copy number alterations and fragment length distributions to clinical and imaging findings. RESULTS: We observed copy number alterations in 4/7 polymetastatic cancer patients, 1/7 OMD and 1/7 SCCHN patients, these patients' imaging showed progression following radiotherapy. Using unsupervised learning, we identified cancer-specific fragment length features that showed a strong correlation with copy number-based tumor fraction estimates. In 4/4 HPV-positive SCCHN patient samples, we detected viral DNA that enabled the monitoring of very low tumor fraction samples. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that an elevated tumor fraction is associated with tumor aggressiveness and systemic tumor spread. This information may be used to adapt treatment strategies. Further, we show that by detecting specific sequences such as viral DNA, the sensitivity of detecting cancer from cell-free DNA sequencing data can be greatly increased.

2.
medRxiv ; 2024 Mar 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38585974

RESUMO

Most current studies rely on short-read sequencing to detect somatic structural variation (SV) in cancer genomes. Long-read sequencing offers the advantage of better mappability and long-range phasing, which results in substantial improvements in germline SV detection. However, current long-read SV detection methods do not generalize well to the analysis of somatic SVs in tumor genomes with complex rearrangements, heterogeneity, and aneuploidy. Here, we present Severus: a method for the accurate detection of different types of somatic SVs using a phased breakpoint graph approach. To benchmark various short- and long-read SV detection methods, we sequenced five tumor/normal cell line pairs with Illumina, Nanopore, and PacBio sequencing platforms; on this benchmark Severus showed the highest F1 scores (harmonic mean of the precision and recall) as compared to long-read and short-read methods. We then applied Severus to three clinical cases of pediatric cancer, demonstrating concordance with known genetic findings as well as revealing clinically relevant cryptic rearrangements missed by standard genomic panels.

3.
Am J Hum Genet ; 111(3): 544-561, 2024 Mar 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38307027

RESUMO

Cervical cancer is caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, has few approved targeted therapeutics, and is the most common cause of cancer death in low-resource countries. We characterized 19 cervical and four head and neck cancer cell lines using long-read DNA and RNA sequencing and identified the HPV types, HPV integration sites, chromosomal alterations, and cancer driver mutations. Structural variation analysis revealed telomeric deletions associated with DNA inversions resulting from breakage-fusion-bridge (BFB) cycles. BFB is a common mechanism of chromosomal alterations in cancer, and our study applies long-read sequencing to this important chromosomal rearrangement type. Analysis of the inversion sites revealed staggered ends consistent with exonuclease digestion of the DNA after breakage. Some BFB events are complex, involving inter- or intra-chromosomal insertions or rearrangements. None of the BFB breakpoints had telomere sequences added to resolve the dicentric chromosomes, and only one BFB breakpoint showed chromothripsis. Five cell lines have a chromosomal region 11q BFB event, with YAP1-BIRC3-BIRC2 amplification. Indeed, YAP1 amplification is associated with a 10-year-earlier age of diagnosis of cervical cancer and is three times more common in African American women. This suggests that individuals with cervical cancer and YAP1-BIRC3-BIRC2 amplification, especially those of African ancestry, might benefit from targeted therapy. In summary, we uncovered valuable insights into the mechanisms and consequences of BFB cycles in cervical cancer using long-read sequencing.


Assuntos
Infecções por Papillomavirus , Neoplasias do Colo do Útero , Feminino , Humanos , Neoplasias do Colo do Útero/genética , Aberrações Cromossômicas , Telômero/genética , DNA
4.
medRxiv ; 2023 Aug 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37662332

RESUMO

Cervical cancer is caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, has few approved targeted therapeutics, and is the most common cause of cancer death in low-resource countries. We characterized 19 cervical and four head and neck cell lines using long-read DNA and RNA sequencing and identified the HPV types, HPV integration sites, chromosomal alterations, and cancer driver mutations. Structural variation analysis revealed telomeric deletions associated with DNA inversions resulting from breakage-fusion-bridge (BFB) cycles. BFB is a common mechanism of chromosomal alterations in cancer, and this is one of the first analyses of these events using long-read sequencing. Analysis of the inversion sites revealed staggered ends consistent with exonuclease digestion of the DNA after breakage. Some BFB events are complex, involving inter- or intra-chromosomal insertions or rearrangements. None of the BFB breakpoints had telomere sequences added to resolve the dicentric chromosomes and only one BFB breakpoint showed chromothripsis. Five cell lines have a Chr11q BFB event, with YAP1/BIRC2/BIRC3 gene amplification. Indeed, YAP1 amplification is associated with a 10-year earlier age of diagnosis of cervical cancer and is three times more common in African American women. This suggests that cervical cancer patients with YAP1/BIRC2/BIRC3-amplification, especially those of African American ancestry, might benefit from targeted therapy. In summary, we uncovered new insights into the mechanisms and consequences of BFB cycles in cervical cancer using long-read sequencing.

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