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Correction: Analysis of ductal carcinoma in situ by self-reported race reveals molecular differences related to outcome
Strand, Siri H; Houlahan, Kathleen E; Branch, Vernal; King, Lorraine M; Lynch, Thomas; Rivero-Guitiérrez, Belén; Harmon, Bryan; Couch, Fergus; Gallagher, Kristalyn; Kilgore, Mark; Wei, Shi; DeMichele, Angela; King, Tari; McAuliffe, Priscilla; Curtis, Christina; Owzar, Kouros; Marks, Jeffrey R; Colditz, Graham A; Hwang, E Shelley; West, Robert B
PMID: 40859290
ISSN: 1465-542x
CID: 5915922
Serum, Cell-Free, HPV-Human DNA Junction Detection and HPV Typing for Predicting and Monitoring Cervical Cancer Recurrence
Van Arsdale, Anne; Mescheryakova, Olga; Gallego, Sonia; Maggi, Elaine C; Harmon, Bryan; Kuo, Dennis Y S; Van Doorslaer, Koenraad; Einstein, Mark H; Haas, Brian J; Montagna, Cristina; Lenz, Jack
Almost all cervical cancers are caused by human papillomaviruses (HPVs). In most cases, HPV DNA is integrated into the human genome. We found that tumor-specific, HPV-human DNA junctions are detectable in serum cell-free DNA of a fraction of cervical cancer patients at the time of initial treatment and/or at six months following treatment. Retrospective analysis revealed these junctions were more frequently detectable in women in whom the cancer later recurred. We also found that cervical cancers caused by HPV types outside of phylogenetic clade α9 had a higher recurrence frequency than those caused by α9 types in both our study and The Cancer Genome Atlas cervical cancer database, despite the higher prevalence of α9 types including HPV16 in cervical cancer. Thus, HPV-human DNA junction detection in serum cell-free DNA and HPV type determination in tumor tissue may help predict recurrence risk. Screening serum cell-free DNA for junctions may also offer an unambiguous, non-invasive means to monitor absence of recurrence following treatment.
PMCID:11741462
PMID: 39830266
CID: 5915912
Analysis of ductal carcinoma in situ by self-reported race reveals molecular differences related to outcome
Strand, Siri H; Houlahan, Kathleen E; Branch, Vernal; King, Lorraine M; Lynch, Thomas; Rivero-Guitiérrez, Belén; Harmon, Bryan; Couch, Fergus; Gallagher, Kristalyn; Kilgore, Mark; Wei, Shi; DeMichele, Angela; King, Tari; McAuliffe, Priscilla; Curtis, Christina; Owzar, Kouros; Marks, Jeffrey R; Colditz, Graham A; Hwang, E Shelley; West, Robert B
BACKGROUND:Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is a non-obligate precursor to invasive breast cancer (IBC). Studies have indicated differences in DCIS outcome based on race or ethnicity, but molecular differences have not been investigated. METHODS:We examined the molecular profile of DCIS by self-reported race (SRR) and outcome groups in Black (n = 99) and White (n = 191) women in a large DCIS case-control cohort study with longitudinal follow up. RESULTS:Gene expression and pathway analyses suggested that different genes and pathways are involved in diagnosis and ipsilateral breast outcome (DCIS or IBC) after DCIS treatment in White versus Black women. We identified differences in ER and HER2 expression, tumor microenvironment composition, and copy number variations by SRR and outcome groups. CONCLUSIONS:Our results suggest that different molecular mechanisms drive initiation and subsequent ipsilateral breast events in Black versus White women.
PMID: 39223670
ISSN: 1465-542x
CID: 5915902
Structure and transcription of integrated HPV DNA in vulvar carcinomas
Van Arsdale, Anne; Turker, Lauren; Chang, Yoke-Chen; Gould, Joshua; Harmon, Bryan; Maggi, Elaine C; Meshcheryakova, Olga; Brown, Maxwell P; Luong, Dana; Van Doorslaer, Koenraad; Einstein, Mark H; Kuo, Dennis Y S; Zheng, Deyou; Haas, Brian J; Lenz, Jack; Montagna, Cristina
HPV infections are associated with a fraction of vulvar cancers. Through hybridization capture and DNA sequencing, HPV DNA was detected in five of thirteen vulvar cancers. HPV16 DNA was integrated into human DNA in three of the five. The insertions were in introns of human NCKAP1, C5orf67, and LRP1B. Integrations in NCKAP1 and C5orf67 were flanked by short direct repeats in the human DNA, consistent with HPV DNA insertions at sites of abortive, staggered, endonucleolytic incisions. The insertion in C5orf67 was present as a 36 kbp, human-HPV-hetero-catemeric DNA as either an extrachromosomal circle or a tandem repeat within the human genome. The human circularization/repeat junction was defined at single nucleotide resolution. The integrated viral DNA segments all retained an intact upstream regulatory region and the adjacent viral E6 and E7 oncogenes. RNA sequencing revealed that the only HPV genes consistently transcribed from the integrated viral DNAs were E7 and E6*I. The other two HPV DNA+ tumors had coinfections, but no evidence for integration. HPV-positive and HPV-negative vulvar cancers exhibited contrasting human, global gene expression patterns partially overlapping with previously observed differences between HPV-positive and HPV-negative cervical and oropharyngeal cancers. A substantial fraction of the differentially expressed genes involved immune system function. Thus, transcription and HPV DNA integration in vulvar cancers resemble those in other HPV-positive cancers. This study emphasizes the power of hybridization capture coupled with DNA and RNA sequencing to identify a broad spectrum of HPV types, determine human genome integration status of viral DNAs, and elucidate their structures.
PMCID:11187145
PMID: 38898085
ISSN: 2056-7944
CID: 5915892
Molecular classification and biomarkers of clinical outcome in breast ductal carcinoma in situ: Analysis of TBCRC 038 and RAHBT cohorts
Strand, Siri H; Rivero-Gutiérrez, Belén; Houlahan, Kathleen E; Seoane, Jose A; King, Lorraine M; Risom, Tyler; Simpson, Lunden A; Vennam, Sujay; Khan, Aziz; Cisneros, Luis; Hardman, Timothy; Harmon, Bryan; Couch, Fergus; Gallagher, Kristalyn; Kilgore, Mark; Wei, Shi; DeMichele, Angela; King, Tari; McAuliffe, Priscilla F; Nangia, Julie; Lee, Joanna; Tseng, Jennifer; Storniolo, Anna Maria; Thompson, Alastair M; Gupta, Gaorav P; Burns, Robyn; Veis, Deborah J; DeSchryver, Katherine; Zhu, Chunfang; Matusiak, Magdalena; Wang, Jason; Zhu, Shirley X; Tappenden, Jen; Ding, Daisy Yi; Zhang, Dadong; Luo, Jingqin; Jiang, Shu; Varma, Sushama; Anderson, Lauren; Straub, Cody; Srivastava, Sucheta; Curtis, Christina; Tibshirani, Rob; Angelo, Robert Michael; Hall, Allison; Owzar, Kouros; Polyak, Kornelia; Maley, Carlo; Marks, Jeffrey R; Colditz, Graham A; Hwang, E Shelley; West, Robert B
Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is the most common precursor of invasive breast cancer (IBC), with variable propensity for progression. We perform multiscale, integrated molecular profiling of DCIS with clinical outcomes by analyzing 774 DCIS samples from 542 patients with 7.3 years median follow-up from the Translational Breast Cancer Research Consortium 038 study and the Resource of Archival Breast Tissue cohorts. We identify 812 genes associated with ipsilateral recurrence within 5 years from treatment and develop a classifier that predicts DCIS or IBC recurrence in both cohorts. Pathways associated with recurrence include proliferation, immune response, and metabolism. Distinct stromal expression patterns and immune cell compositions are identified. Our multiscale approach employed in situ methods to generate a spatially resolved atlas of breast precancers, where complementary modalities can be directly compared and correlated with conventional pathology findings, disease states, and clinical outcome.
PMID: 36400020
ISSN: 1878-3686
CID: 5915872
Tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes in ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)-assessment with three different methodologies and correlation with Oncotype DX DCIS Score
Komforti, Miglena; Badve, Sunil S; Harmon, Bryan; Lo, Yungtai; Fineberg, Susan
AIMS/OBJECTIVE:Tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) are prognostic in invasive breast cancer; however, their prognostic significance in ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) has not been established. The Oncotype DX (ODX) Breast DCIS Score test is a genomic assay used to predict the local recurrence risk. The aims of this study were to quantify TILs in DCIS by the use of three methodologies, and correlate them with the ODX DCIS Score. METHODS AND RESULTS/RESULTS:We studied 97 DCIS cases, all with an ODX DCIS Score. Cases with a low ODX DCIS Score were considered as one group, and those with an intermediate/high ODX Score were considered together. TILs were quantified on haematoxylin and eosin-stained slides. The methodologies used to quantify TILS included assessment of stromal TILs, assessment of touching TILs, and assessment of circumferential TILS. In cases with >5% stromal TILS, the percentage of stromal TILS was considered to be high. In cases with a mean number of more than five touching TILs per DCIS duct, TILs were considered to be present. The ODX DCIS Score was intermediate/high in 27 (28%) cases and low in 70 (72%) cases. There were >5% stromal TILs in 33 (34%) cases, and more than five touching TILs per DCIS duct in 15 (15%) cases; circumferential TILs were present in nine (9%) cases. In univariate analysis, a low ODX DCIS Score showed significant associations with absent touching TILS (P = 0.027), stromal TILs < 5% (P = 0.031), and absent circumferential TILs (P = 0.002). In logistic regression analysis adjusted for necrosis and nuclear grade, touching TILs and circumferential TILs showed significant associations with the ODX DCIS Score, whereas stromal TILs did not. CONCLUSIONS:Our results suggest that both the presence of TILs and the spatial arrangement of TILs or close proximity of TILs to DCIS, and TILs touching or encircling DCIS, may be predictive of recurrence.
PMID: 32557780
ISSN: 1365-2559
CID: 5915852
Insertional oncogenesis by HPV70 revealed by multiple genomic analyses in a clinically HPV-negative cervical cancer
Van Arsdale, Anne; Patterson, Nicole E; Maggi, Elaine C; Agoni, Lorenzo; Van Doorslaer, Koenraad; Harmon, Bryan; Nevadunsky, Nicole; Kuo, Dennis Y S; Einstein, Mark H; Lenz, Jack; Montagna, Cristina
Cervical carcinogenesis, the second leading cause of cancer death in women worldwide, is caused by multiple types of human papillomaviruses (HPVs). To investigate a possible role for HPV in a cervical carcinoma that was HPV-negative by PCR testing, we performed HPV DNA hybridization capture plus massively parallel sequencing. This detected a subgenomic, URR-E6-E7-E1 segment of HPV70 DNA, a type not generally associated with cervical cancer, inserted in an intron of the B-cell lymphoma/leukemia 11B (BCL11B) gene in the human genome. Long range DNA sequencing confirmed the virus and flanking BCL11B DNA structures including both insertion junctions. Global transcriptomic analysis detected multiple, alternatively spliced, HPV70-BCL11B, fusion transcripts with fused open reading frames. The insertion and fusion transcripts were present in an intraepithelial precursor phase of tumorigenesis. These results suggest oncogenicity of HPV70, identify novel BCL11B variants with potential oncogenic implications, and underscore the advantages of thorough genomic analyses to elucidate insights into HPV-associated tumorigenesis.
PMCID:6916423
PMID: 31407403
ISSN: 1098-2264
CID: 5915822
Comparison of Local Recurrence Risk Estimates After Breast-Conserving Surgery for DCIS: DCIS Nomogram Versus Refined Oncotype DX Breast DCIS Score
Van Zee, Kimberly J; Zabor, Emily C; Di Donato, Rosemarie; Harmon, Bryan; Fox, Jana; Morrow, Monica; Cody, Hiram S; Fineberg, Susan A
BACKGROUND:A ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) Nomogram integrating 10 clinicopathologic/treatment factors and a Refined DCIS Score (RDS) that incorporates a genomic assay and three clinicopathologic factors (Oncotype DX DCIS Score) are available to estimate DCIS 10-year local recurrence risk (LRR). This study compared these estimates. METHODS:Patients 50 years of age or older with DCIS size 2.5 cm or smaller and a genomic assay available were identified. An RDS within 1-2% of the range of Nomogram LRR estimates obtained by assuming use and non-use of endocrine therapy (Nomogram ± ET) was defined as concordant. Assuming a 10-year risk threshold of 10% for recommending radiation, Nomogram ± ET and RDS estimates were compared, and threshold concordance was determined. RESULTS:For 54 (92%) of 59 patients, the RDS and Nomogram ± ET LRR estimates were concordant. For the remaining 5 (8%) of the 59 patients, the RDS LRR estimates were lower than the Nomogram + ET estimates, with an absolute difference of 3-8%, and thus were discordant. For these five patients, the RDS estimates of 10-year LRR were lower than 10% (range 5-8%) and the Nomogram + ET estimates were 10% or higher (range 11-14%). These five patients with both discordant and threshold-discordant estimates all had close margins (≤ 2 mm). CONCLUSIONS:Among 92% of women 50 years of age or older with DCIS size 2.5 cm or smaller, free-of-charge online Nomogram 10-year LRR estimates were concordant with those obtained using the commercially available RDS (> $4600). Among the 8% with discordant risk estimates, the RDS appeared to underestimate the LRR and may lead to inappropriate omission of radiotherapy. Unless other data show a clinically significant advantage of the RDS (Oncotype DX DCIS Score), the study data suggest that for women 50 years of age or older with DCIS size 2.5 cm or smaller, its use is not warranted.
PMCID:6736743
PMID: 31342373
ISSN: 1534-4681
CID: 5915812
A man in his 40s with frequent bronchitis, localized wheezes, and hemoptysis [Case Report]
Skaria, Shaji D; Harmon, Bryan; Desai, Alpa G
PMID: 24889442
ISSN: 1931-3543
CID: 5915792