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Reconstructing metastatic seeding patterns of human cancers

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2017

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Springer Nature
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Reiter, Johannes G., Alvin P. Makohon-Moore, Jeffrey M. Gerold, Ivana Bozic, Krishnendu Chatterjee, Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue, Bert Vogelstein, and Martin A. Nowak. 2017. “Reconstructing Metastatic Seeding Patterns of Human Cancers.” Nature Communications 8 (January 31): 14114. doi:10.1038/ncomms14114.

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Abstract

Reconstructing the evolutionary history of metastases is critical for understanding their basic biological principles and has profound clinical implications. Genome-wide sequencing data has enabled modern phylogenomic methods to accurately dissect subclones and their phylogenies from noisy and impure bulk tumor samples at unprecedented depth. However, existing methods are not designed to infer metastatic seeding patterns. Here we develop a tool, called Treeomics, to reconstruct the phylogeny of metastases and map subclones to their anatomic locations. Treeomics infers comprehensive seeding patterns for pancreatic, ovarian, and prostate cancers. Moreover, Treeomics correctly disambiguates true seeding patterns from sequencing artifacts; 7% of variants were misclassified by conventional statistical methods. These artifacts can skew phylogenies by creating illusory tumor heterogeneity among distinct samples. In silico benchmarking on simulated tumor phylogenies across a wide range of sample purities (15-95%) and sequencing depths (25-800x) demonstrates the accuracy of Treeomics compared to existing methods.

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