Abstract 811: Identifying genomic signatures within circulating breast cancer cells.

Cancer Research(2013)

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Introduction: Breast cancer is not a single disease but encompasses several subtypes, each with a distinct molecular profile and response to treatment. The proportion of cells that express prognostic markers (ER/PR/HER2) can vary greatly within tumors, affecting sensitivity or resistance to therapies. Levels of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in blood have been found to be related to disease progression. They show genetic evolution from the primary tumors they originate from, especially with acquired HER2 expression. CTCs could contain genomic alterations that define them as metastatic intermediates, and may be identified in primary tumors as an aggressive component that responds differentially to chemotherapy. Array-CGH likely fails to detect alterations present at low frequencies within primary tumours. Profiling of CTCs will help identify occult changes occurring in breast cancer cells during progression to metastasis. Methodology: CTCs and matched normal white blood cells were isolated from the blood of 17/38 breast cancer patients, prior to commencement of treatment. Copy number analysis was performed with the Affymetrix Genome-Wide Human SNP 6.0 array using a paired tumor-normal approach (Partek Genomics Suite). Minimal common regions (MCRs) of genomic gain were extrapolated, followed by unsupervised clustering. Associations between MCRs and luminal/HER2/triple negative subtypes; as well as metastasis, were identified using the Fisher9s Exact test. Results: CTC genomic profiles clustered into 2 groups independent of subtype. A 1.2Mb amplicon containing the ERBB2 gene was gained in 15/17 patients, irrespective of HER2 status of the primary tumor. Cluster A had significantly fewer gains with 13 MCRs (AKT2, COL18A1), and was heterogeneous with no overlap in Cluster B. Cluster B showed higher genomic alteration and homogeneity between samples with 665 MCRs. Chromosome 19 was most frequently altered across all patients with 54/113 (48%) MCRs. Analysis of 787 primary breast carcinomas showed similar MCRs in 3-4% of samples. Patients with distant metastases and younger age ( Conclusions: Genomic profiles of CTCs clustered into two groups: a heterogeneous group with minimal alterations that may be sufficient for dissemination; and a more homogenous group with extensive alteration (particularly on chromosome 19) that could define those CTCs that are capable of survival and metastasis. The dissimilarity between groups is suggestive of cancer cells transitioning through stages that may be reflected in their genomes. We are currently using FISH to detect cells within primary tumors with CTC-like signatures. Citation Format: Nisha Kanwar, Pingzhao Hu, Mark Clemons, Philippe Bedard, David McCready, Susan J. Done. Identifying genomic signatures within circulating breast cancer cells. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 104th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2013 Apr 6-10; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2013;73(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 811. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2013-811
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