作者
Natasha Rekhtman,Sam E. Tischfield,Christopher A. Febres‐Aldana,Jake June-Koo Lee,Jason C. Chang,Benjamin Herzberg,Pier Selenica,Hyung Jun Woo,Chad Vanderbilt,Soo‐Ryum Yang,Fei Xu,Anita S. Bowman,Edaise M. da Silva,Anne Marie Noronha,Diana Mandelker,Miika Mehine,Semanti Mukherjee,Juan Blanco-Heredia,John J. Orgera,Gouri J. Nanjangud,Marina K. Baine,Rania G. Aly,Jennifer L. Sauter,William D. Travis,Omid Savari,André L. Moreira,Christina J. Falcon,Francis M. Bodd,Christina E. Wilson,Jacklynn V. Sienty,Parvathy Manoj,Harsha Sridhar,Lu Wang,Noura J. Choudhury,Michael Offin,Helena A. Yu,Álvaro Quintanal-Villalonga,Michael F. Berger,Marc Ladanyi,Mark T.A. Donoghue,Jorge S. Reis‐Filho,Charles M. Rudin
摘要
Abstract Small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) is a highly aggressive malignancy that is typically associated with tobacco exposure and inactivation of RB1 and TP53 genes. Here we performed detailed clinicopathologic, genomic and transcriptomic profiling of an atypical subset of SCLC that lacked RB1 and TP53 co-inactivation and arose in never/light smokers. We found that most cases were associated with chromothripsis – massive, localized chromosome shattering – recurrently involving chromosomes 11 or 12, and resulting in extrachromosomal (ecDNA) amplification of CCND1 or co-amplification of CCND2/CDK4/MDM2, respectively. Uniquely, these clinically aggressive tumors exhibited genomic and pathologic links to pulmonary carcinoids, suggesting a previously uncharacterized mode of SCLC pathogenesis via transformation from lower-grade neuroendocrine tumors or their progenitors. Conversely, SCLC in never-smokers harboring inactivated RB1 and TP53 exhibited hallmarks of adenocarcinoma-to-SCLC derivation, supporting two distinct pathways of plasticity-mediated pathogenesis of SCLC in never-smokers.