Multifocal clonal evolution characterized using circulating tumour DNA in a case of metastatic breast cancer

Muhammed Murtaza(Translational Genomics Research Institute), Sarah‐Jane Dawson(University of Cambridge), Katherine Pogrebniak(University of Cambridge), Oscar M. Rueda(University of Cambridge), Elena Provenzano(National Health Service), John W. Grant(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Suet‐Feung Chin(University of Cambridge), Dana W.Y. Tsui(University of Cambridge), Francesco Marass(University of Cambridge), Davina Gale(University of Cambridge), H. Raza Ali(University of Cambridge), Pankti Shah(Translational Genomics Research Institute), Tania Contente‐Cuomo(Translational Genomics Research Institute), Hossein Farahani(BC Cancer Agency), Karey Shumansky(BC Cancer Agency), Zoya Kingsbury(University of Chester), Sean Humphray(University of Chester), David Bentley(University of Chester), Sohrab P. Shah(BC Cancer Agency), Matthew Wallis(National Health Service), Nitzan Rosenfeld(University of Cambridge), Carlos Caldas(University of Cambridge)
Nature Communications
November 4, 2015
Cited by 507Open Access
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Abstract

Circulating tumour DNA analysis can be used to track tumour burden and analyse cancer genomes non-invasively but the extent to which it represents metastatic heterogeneity is unknown. Here we follow a patient with metastatic ER-positive and HER2-positive breast cancer receiving two lines of targeted therapy over 3 years. We characterize genomic architecture and infer clonal evolution in eight tumour biopsies and nine plasma samples collected over 1,193 days of clinical follow-up using exome and targeted amplicon sequencing. Mutation levels in the plasma samples reflect the clonal hierarchy inferred from sequencing of tumour biopsies. Serial changes in circulating levels of sub-clonal private mutations correlate with different treatment responses between metastatic sites. This comparison of biopsy and plasma samples in a single patient with metastatic breast cancer shows that circulating tumour DNA can allow real-time sampling of multifocal clonal evolution.


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