TY - JOUR
T1 - Genomic profiling of prostate cancers from men with African and European ancestry
AU - Koga, Yusuke
AU - Song, Hanbing
AU - Chalmers, Zachary R.
AU - Newberg, Justin
AU - Kim, Eejung
AU - Carrot-Zhang, Jian
AU - Piou, Daphnee
AU - Polak, Paz
AU - Abdulkadir, Sarki A.
AU - Ziv, Elad
AU - Meyerson, Matthew
AU - Frampton, Garrett M.
AU - Campbell, Joshua D.
AU - Huang, Franklin W.
N1 - Funding Information:
J.Y. Newberg is an employee of Foundation Medicine and holds ownership interest (including patents) in F. Hoffmann-La Roche AG. M. Meyerson is a paid advisory board member for OrigiMed and reports receiving commercial research grants from Bayer, Ono, Janssen, and Novo. G.M. Frampton is an employee of Foundation Medicine and holds ownership interest (including patents) in Roche AG. No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed by the other authors.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Association for Cancer Research.
PY - 2020/9
Y1 - 2020/9
N2 - Purpose: African American (AFR) men have the highest mortality rate from prostate cancer (PCa) compared with men of other racial/ancestral groups. Differences in the spectrum of somatic genome alterations in tumors between AFR men and other populations have not been well-characterized due to a lack of inclusion of significant numbers in genomic studies. Experimental Design: To identify genomic alterations associated with race, we compared the frequencies of somatic alterations in PCa obtained from four publicly available datasets comprising 250 AFR and 611 European American (EUR) men and a targeted sequencing dataset from a commercial platform of 436 AFR and 3018 EUR men. Results: Mutations in ZFHX3 as well as focal deletions in ETV3 were more frequent in tumors from AFR men. TP53 mutations were associated with increasing Gleason score. MYC amplifications were more frequent in tumors from AFR men with metastatic PCa, whereas deletions in PTEN and rearrangements in TMPRSS2-ERG were less frequent in tumors from AFR men. KMT2D truncations and CCND1 amplifications were more frequent in primary PCa from AFR men. Genomic features that could impact clinical decision making were not significantly different between the two groups including tumor mutation burden, MSI status, and genomic alterations in select DNA repair genes, CDK12, and in AR. Conclusions: Although we identified some novel differences in AFR men compared with other populations, the frequencies of genomic alterations in current therapeutic targets for PCa were similar between AFR and EUR men, suggesting that existing precision medicine approaches could be equally beneficial if applied equitably.
AB - Purpose: African American (AFR) men have the highest mortality rate from prostate cancer (PCa) compared with men of other racial/ancestral groups. Differences in the spectrum of somatic genome alterations in tumors between AFR men and other populations have not been well-characterized due to a lack of inclusion of significant numbers in genomic studies. Experimental Design: To identify genomic alterations associated with race, we compared the frequencies of somatic alterations in PCa obtained from four publicly available datasets comprising 250 AFR and 611 European American (EUR) men and a targeted sequencing dataset from a commercial platform of 436 AFR and 3018 EUR men. Results: Mutations in ZFHX3 as well as focal deletions in ETV3 were more frequent in tumors from AFR men. TP53 mutations were associated with increasing Gleason score. MYC amplifications were more frequent in tumors from AFR men with metastatic PCa, whereas deletions in PTEN and rearrangements in TMPRSS2-ERG were less frequent in tumors from AFR men. KMT2D truncations and CCND1 amplifications were more frequent in primary PCa from AFR men. Genomic features that could impact clinical decision making were not significantly different between the two groups including tumor mutation burden, MSI status, and genomic alterations in select DNA repair genes, CDK12, and in AR. Conclusions: Although we identified some novel differences in AFR men compared with other populations, the frequencies of genomic alterations in current therapeutic targets for PCa were similar between AFR and EUR men, suggesting that existing precision medicine approaches could be equally beneficial if applied equitably.
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U2 - 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-4112
DO - 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-4112
M3 - Article
C2 - 32651179
AN - SCOPUS:85094950273
SN - 1078-0432
VL - 26
SP - 4651
EP - 4660
JO - Clinical Cancer Research
JF - Clinical Cancer Research
IS - 17
ER -