Abstract
High-grade
serous ovarian cancer (HGSC) is characterized by poor outcome, often
attributed to emergence of treatment-resistant sub-clones. We sought to
measure the degree of genomic diversity within primary, untreated HGSC
to examine the natural state of tumor evolution prior to therapy. We
performed exome sequencing, copy number analysis, targeted amplicon deep
sequencing and gene expression profiling on thirty-one spatially and
temporally separated HGSC tumor specimens (six patients) including
ovarian masses, distant metastases, and fallopian tube lesions. We found
widespread intra-tumoral variation in mutation, copy number, and gene
expression profiles, with key driver alterations in genes present in
only a subset of samples (e.g. PIK3CA, CTNNB1, NF1). On average, only 51.5% of mutations were present in every sample of a given case (range: 10.2%-91.4%), with TP53
as the only somatic mutation consistently present in all samples.
Complex segmental aneuploidies, such as whole genome doubling, were
present in a subset of samples from the same individual, with divergent
copy number changes segregating independently of point mutation
acquisition. Reconstruction of evolutionary histories showed one patient
with mixed HGSC and endometrioid histology with common etiologic origin
in the fallopian tube and subsequent selection of different driver
mutations in the histologically distinct samples. In this patient, we
observed mixed cell populations in the early fallopian tube lesion,
indicating diversity arises at early stages of tumorigenesis. Our
results reveal that HGSC exhibit highly individual evolutionary
trajectories and diverse genomic tapestries prior to therapy, exposing
an essential biological characteristic to inform future design of
personalized therapeutic solutions and investigation of drug resistance
mechan
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