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Abstract PL-01: Breast Cancer Evolution, Immune Evasion and Metastasis Driven by Chromosomal Instability

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Abstract Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a poor prognostic feature with high prevalence in breast cancer and is responsible for driving Somatic Copy Number Aberrations and Intratumour Heterogeneity (ITH) within subclones during breast cancer evolution. We have observed that SCNAs are enriched in metastatic samples, including gains in chromosome 11q13.3 (encompassing CCND1) in HER2+ breast cancer. However, there have thus far been no prospective, comprehensive studies of intratumor heterogeneity in breast cancer. We will present data from TRACERx Breast/SCANDARE a prospective, multicentre study of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) in which multi-region biopsies have been collected from primary TNBC prior to neoadjuvant treatment, and at longitudinal time points including surgery and relapse. We find prevalent intratumor heterogeneity in somatic mutations and SCNAs in the primary tumor prior to treatment. We have leveraged the rich clinical annotation in this cohort to correlate intratumor heterogeneity scores with key clinical outcomes, including treatment response (pathological complete response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy) and survival. We find that CIN manifests as oncogenic amplification on extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA), which plays a pivotal role in driving drug resistance and tumor evolution. Through analysis of Whole Genome Sequencing data from 2936 breast tumors from the Genomics England breast cancer cohort, we have identified focal amplifications driven by ecDNA in 46.4% of HER2+ breast cancers. EcDNA were enriched in metastatic tumors and was associated with poor clinical outcomes. In addition to oncogenic amplifications such as HER2 derived from ecDNA during cancer evolution, ecDNAs contained immunomodulatory genes associated with reduced T cell infiltration. Further Immune-modulation by CIN results from loss of heterozygosity of the HLA locus (HLA LOH) and is a prevalent subclonal event in breast cancer. CIN is further drives haploid LOH, resulting in the high prevalence of whole genome doubling and further CIN in TNBC. Tumors are heterogeneous compositions of distinct clones with different compliments of SCNAs and varying levels of fitness, hence measuring the proliferation of individual clones to predict future evolutionary outcomes is likely to be critical. We have developed SPRINTER (Single-cell Proliferation Rate Inference in Non-homogeneous Tumours through Evolutionary Routes), a novel computational method to measure proliferation rates in individual tumour clones using single-cell whole-genome DNA sequencing data. We applied SPRINTER to 42,009 triple negative breast cancer cells, demonstrating significant proliferative heterogeneity between distinct tumor clones. Importantly, we show a correlation between higher proliferation rates and increased rates of somatic variants, suggesting proliferation links to clone evolvability. Taken together, these complimentary analyses provide evidence for the importance of CIN in driving ITH, selection, metastasis and immune evasion and provide a framework to determine recurrent evolutionary patterns in breast cancer evolution. Citation Format: C. Swanton. Breast Cancer Evolution, Immune Evasion and Metastasis Driven by Chromosomal Instability [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2023 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2023 Dec 5-9; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(9 Suppl):Abstract nr PL-01.
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
Title: Abstract PL-01: Breast Cancer Evolution, Immune Evasion and Metastasis Driven by Chromosomal Instability
Description:
Abstract Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a poor prognostic feature with high prevalence in breast cancer and is responsible for driving Somatic Copy Number Aberrations and Intratumour Heterogeneity (ITH) within subclones during breast cancer evolution.
We have observed that SCNAs are enriched in metastatic samples, including gains in chromosome 11q13.
3 (encompassing CCND1) in HER2+ breast cancer.
However, there have thus far been no prospective, comprehensive studies of intratumor heterogeneity in breast cancer.
We will present data from TRACERx Breast/SCANDARE a prospective, multicentre study of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) in which multi-region biopsies have been collected from primary TNBC prior to neoadjuvant treatment, and at longitudinal time points including surgery and relapse.
We find prevalent intratumor heterogeneity in somatic mutations and SCNAs in the primary tumor prior to treatment.
We have leveraged the rich clinical annotation in this cohort to correlate intratumor heterogeneity scores with key clinical outcomes, including treatment response (pathological complete response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy) and survival.
We find that CIN manifests as oncogenic amplification on extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA), which plays a pivotal role in driving drug resistance and tumor evolution.
Through analysis of Whole Genome Sequencing data from 2936 breast tumors from the Genomics England breast cancer cohort, we have identified focal amplifications driven by ecDNA in 46.
4% of HER2+ breast cancers.
EcDNA were enriched in metastatic tumors and was associated with poor clinical outcomes.
In addition to oncogenic amplifications such as HER2 derived from ecDNA during cancer evolution, ecDNAs contained immunomodulatory genes associated with reduced T cell infiltration.
Further Immune-modulation by CIN results from loss of heterozygosity of the HLA locus (HLA LOH) and is a prevalent subclonal event in breast cancer.
CIN is further drives haploid LOH, resulting in the high prevalence of whole genome doubling and further CIN in TNBC.
Tumors are heterogeneous compositions of distinct clones with different compliments of SCNAs and varying levels of fitness, hence measuring the proliferation of individual clones to predict future evolutionary outcomes is likely to be critical.
We have developed SPRINTER (Single-cell Proliferation Rate Inference in Non-homogeneous Tumours through Evolutionary Routes), a novel computational method to measure proliferation rates in individual tumour clones using single-cell whole-genome DNA sequencing data.
We applied SPRINTER to 42,009 triple negative breast cancer cells, demonstrating significant proliferative heterogeneity between distinct tumor clones.
Importantly, we show a correlation between higher proliferation rates and increased rates of somatic variants, suggesting proliferation links to clone evolvability.
Taken together, these complimentary analyses provide evidence for the importance of CIN in driving ITH, selection, metastasis and immune evasion and provide a framework to determine recurrent evolutionary patterns in breast cancer evolution.
Citation Format: C.
Swanton.
Breast Cancer Evolution, Immune Evasion and Metastasis Driven by Chromosomal Instability [abstract].
In: Proceedings of the 2023 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2023 Dec 5-9; San Antonio, TX.
Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(9 Suppl):Abstract nr PL-01.

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