COSMIC: exploring the world's knowledge of somatic mutations in human cancer

Simon Forbes(Wellcome Sanger Institute), David Beare(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Prasad Gunasekaran(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Kenric Leung(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Nidhi Bindal(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Harry Boutselakis(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Minjie Ding(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Sally Bamford(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Charlotte G. Cole(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Sari Ward(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Chai Yin Kok(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Mingming Jia(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Tisham De(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Jon W. Teague(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Michael R. Stratton(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Ultan McDermott(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Peter J. Campbell(Wellcome Sanger Institute)
Nucleic Acids Research
October 29, 2014
Cited by 2,378Open Access
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Abstract

COSMIC, the Catalogue Of Somatic Mutations In Cancer (http://cancer.sanger.ac.uk) is the world's largest and most comprehensive resource for exploring the impact of somatic mutations in human cancer. Our latest release (v70; Aug 2014) describes 2 002 811 coding point mutations in over one million tumor samples and across most human genes. To emphasize depth of knowledge on known cancer genes, mutation information is curated manually from the scientific literature, allowing very precise definitions of disease types and patient details. Combination of almost 20,000 published studies gives substantial resolution of how mutations and phenotypes relate in human cancer, providing insights into the stratification of mutations and biomarkers across cancer patient populations. Conversely, our curation of cancer genomes (over 12,000) emphasizes knowledge breadth, driving discovery of unrecognized cancer-driving hotspots and molecular targets. Our high-resolution curation approach is globally unique, giving substantial insight into molecular biomarkers in human oncology. In addition, COSMIC also details more than six million noncoding mutations, 10,534 gene fusions, 61,299 genome rearrangements, 695,504 abnormal copy number segments and 60,119,787 abnormal expression variants. All these types of somatic mutation are annotated to both the human genome and each affected coding gene, then correlated across disease and mutation types.


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