Clonal evolution during metastatic spread in high-risk neuroblastoma. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Patients with high-risk neuroblastoma generally present with widely metastatic disease and often relapse despite intensive therapy. As most studies to date focused on diagnosis-relapse pairs, our understanding of the genetic and clonal dynamics of metastatic spread and disease progression remain limited. Here, using genomic profiling of 470 sequential and spatially separated samples from 283 patients, we characterize subtype-specific genetic evolutionary trajectories from diagnosis through progression and end-stage metastatic disease. Clonal tracing timed disease initiation to embryogenesis. Continuous acquisition of structural variants at disease-defining loci (MYCN, TERT, MDM2-CDK4) followed by convergent evolution of mutations targeting shared pathways emerged as the predominant feature of progression. At diagnosis metastatic clones were already established at distant sites where they could stay dormant, only to cause relapses years later and spread via metastasis-to-metastasis and polyclonal seeding after therapy.

publication date

  • May 11, 2023

Research

keywords

  • Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
  • Neuroblastoma

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84988924813

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1093/nar/gkw520

PubMed ID

  • 37169874

Additional Document Info