Englander Institute for Precision Medicine

Evolution of structural rearrangements in prostate cancer intracranial metastases.

TitleEvolution of structural rearrangements in prostate cancer intracranial metastases.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsKhani F, Hooper WF, Wang X, Chu TR, Shah M, Winterkorn L, Sigouros M, Conteduca V, Pisapia D, Wobker S, Walker S, Graff JN, Robinson B, Mosquera JMiguel, Sboner A, Elemento O, Robine N, Beltran H
JournalNPJ Precis Oncol
Volume7
Issue1
Pagination91
Date Published2023 Sep 13
ISSN2397-768X
Abstract

Intracranial metastases in prostate cancer are uncommon but clinically aggressive. A detailed molecular characterization of prostate cancer intracranial metastases would improve our understanding of their pathogenesis and the search for new treatment strategies. We evaluated the clinical and molecular characteristics of 36 patients with metastatic prostate cancer to either the dura or brain parenchyma. We performed whole genome sequencing (WGS) of 10 intracranial prostate cancer metastases, as well as WGS of primary prostate tumors from men who later developed metastatic disease (n = 6) and nonbrain prostate cancer metastases (n = 36). This first whole genome sequencing study of prostate intracranial metastases led to several new insights. First, there was a higher diversity of complex structural alterations in prostate cancer intracranial metastases compared to primary tumor tissues. Chromothripsis and chromoplexy events seemed to dominate, yet there were few enrichments of specific categories of structural variants compared with non-brain metastases. Second, aberrations involving the AR gene, including AR enhancer gain were observed in 7/10 (70%) of intracranial metastases, as well as recurrent loss of function aberrations involving TP53 in 8/10 (80%), RB1 in 2/10 (20%), BRCA2 in 2/10 (20%), and activation of the PI3K/AKT/PTEN pathway in 8/10 (80%). These alterations were frequently present in tumor tissues from other sites of disease obtained concurrently or sequentially from the same individuals. Third, clonality analysis points to genomic factors and evolutionary bottlenecks that contribute to metastatic spread in patients with prostate cancer. These results describe the aggressive molecular features underlying intracranial metastasis that may inform future diagnostic and treatment approaches.

DOI10.1038/s41698-023-00435-3
Alternate JournalNPJ Precis Oncol
PubMed ID37704749
PubMed Central IDPMC10499931
Grant ListP50 CA211024 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
R37 CA241486 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States

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