<i>ARID1A</i> Mutations in Endometriosis-Associated Ovarian Carcinomas

Kimberly C. Wiegand(BC Cancer Agency), Sohrab P. Shah(BC Cancer Agency), Osama M. Al‐Agha(BC Cancer Agency), Yongjun Zhao(Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre), Kane Tse(Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre), Thomas Zeng(Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre), Janine Senz(BC Cancer Agency), Melissa K. McConechy(BC Cancer Agency), Michael S. Anglesio(BC Cancer Agency), Steve E. Kalloger(BC Cancer Agency), Winnie Yang(BC Cancer Agency), Alireza Heravi‐Moussavi(BC Cancer Agency), Ryan Giuliany(BC Cancer Agency), Christine Chow, John Fee, Abdalnasser Zayed(BC Cancer Agency), Leah Prentice(BC Cancer Agency), Nataliya Melnyk(BC Cancer Agency), Gulisa Turashvili, Allen Delaney(Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre), Jason Madore(Hôpital Notre-Dame), Stephen Yip(BC Cancer Agency), Andrew McPherson(BC Cancer Agency), Gavin Ha(BC Cancer Agency), Lynda Bell(BC Cancer Agency), Sián Fereday(Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre), Angela Tam(Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre), Laura Galletta(Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre), Patricia N. Tonin(McGill University Health Centre), Diane Provencher(Hôpital Notre-Dame), Dianne Miller(BC Cancer Agency), Steven J.M. Jones(Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre), Richard A. Moore(Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre), Gregg B. Morin(University of British Columbia), Arusha Oloumi, Niki Boyd(BC Cancer Agency), Samuel Aparício(University of British Columbia), Ie Ming Shih(Johns Hopkins University), Anne‐Marie Mes‐Masson, David D.L. Bowtell(The University of Melbourne), Martin Hirst(Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre), C. Blake Gilks(University of British Columbia), Marco A. Marra(University of British Columbia), David G. Huntsman(BC Cancer Agency)
New England Journal of Medicine
October 13, 2010
Cited by 1,692Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ovarian clear-cell and endometrioid carcinomas may arise from endometriosis, but the molecular events involved in this transformation have not been described. METHODS: We sequenced the whole transcriptomes of 18 ovarian clear-cell carcinomas and 1 ovarian clear-cell carcinoma cell line and found somatic mutations in ARID1A (the AT-rich interactive domain 1A [SWI-like] gene) in 6 of the samples. ARID1A encodes BAF250a, a key component of the SWI–SNF chromatin remodeling complex. We sequenced ARID1A in an additional 210 ovarian carcinomas and a second ovarian clear-cell carcinoma cell line and measured BAF250a expression by means of immunohistochemical analysis in an additional 455 ovarian carcinomas. RESULTS: ARID1A mutations were seen in 55 of 119 ovarian clear-cell carcinomas (46%), 10 of 33 endometrioid carcinomas (30%), and none of the 76 high-grade serous ovarian carcinomas. Seventeen carcinomas had two somatic mutations each. Loss of the BAF250a protein correlated strongly with the ovarian clear-cell carcinoma and endometrioid carcinoma subtypes and the presence of ARID1A mutations. In two patients, ARID1A mutations and loss of BAF250a expression were evident in the tumor and contiguous atypical endometriosis but not in distant endometriotic lesions. CONCLUSIONS: These data implicate ARID1A as a tumor-suppressor gene frequently disrupted in ovarian clear-cell and endometrioid carcinomas. Since ARID1A mutation and loss of BAF250a can be seen in the preneoplastic lesions, we speculate that this is an early event in the transformation of endometriosis into cancer. (Funded by the British Columbia Cancer Foundation and the Vancouver General Hospital–University of British Columbia Hospital Foundation.).


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