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Genomic and Transcriptomic Characterization of Relapsed SCLC Through Rapid Research Autopsy. JTO Clin Res Rep 2021 Apr;2(4):100164

Date

10/01/2021

Pubmed ID

34590014

Pubmed Central ID

PMC8474405

DOI

10.1016/j.jtocrr.2021.100164

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85109556332 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   10 Citations

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Relapsed SCLC is characterized by therapeutic resistance and high mortality rate. Despite decades of research, mechanisms responsible for therapeutic resistance have remained elusive owing to limited tissues available for molecular studies. Thus, an unmet need remains for molecular characterization of relapsed SCLC to facilitate development of effective therapies.

METHODS: We performed whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing of metastatic tumor samples procured from research autopsies of five patients with relapsed SCLC. We implemented bioinformatics tools to infer subclonal phylogeny and identify recurrent genomic alterations. We implemented immune cell signature and single-sample gene set enrichment analyses on tumor and normal transcriptome data from autopsy and additional primary and relapsed SCLC data sets. Furthermore, we evaluated T cell-inflamed gene expression profiles in neuroendocrine (ASCL1, NEUROD1) and non-neuroendocrine (YAP1, POU2F3) SCLC subtypes.

RESULTS: Exome sequencing revealed clonal heterogeneity (intertumor and intratumor) arising from branched evolution and identified resistance-associated truncal and subclonal alterations in relapsed SCLC. Transcriptome analyses further revealed a noninflamed phenotype in neuroendocrine SCLC subtypes (ASCL1, NEUROD1) associated with decreased expression of genes involved in adaptive antitumor immunity whereas non-neuroendocrine subtypes (YAP1, POU2F3) revealed a more inflamed phenotype.

CONCLUSIONS: Our results reveal substantial tumor heterogeneity and complex clonal evolution in relapsed SCLC. Furthermore, we report that neuroendocrine SCLC subtypes are immunologically cold, thus explaining decreased responsiveness to immune checkpoint blockade. These results suggest that the mechanisms of innate and acquired therapeutic resistances are subtype-specific in SCLC and highlight the need for continued investigation to bolster therapy selection and development for this cancer.

Author List

Chen HZ, Bonneville R, Paruchuri A, Reeser JW, Wing MR, Samorodnitsky E, Krook MA, Smith AM, Dao T, Miya J, Wang W, Yu L, Freud AG, Allenby P, Cole S, Otterson G, Shields P, Carbone DP, Roychowdhury S

Author

Hui-Zi Chen MD, PhD Assistant Professor in the Medicine department at Medical College of Wisconsin