Neoadjuvant-Intensive Androgen Deprivation Therapy Selects for Prostate Tumor Foci with Diverse Subclonal Oncogenic Alterations
前列腺癌
雄激素剥夺疗法
前列腺
医学
癌症
雄激素
癌症研究
肿瘤科
内科学
生物
激素
作者
Adam G. Sowalsky,Huihui Ye,Manoj Bhasin,Eliezer M. Van Allen,Massimo Loda,Rosina T. Lis,Laleh Montaser‐Kouhsari,Carla Calagua,Fen Ma,Joshua W. Russo,Rachel Schaefer,Olga Voznesensky,Zhenwei Zhang,Glenn J. Bubley,Bruce Montgomery,Elahe A. Mostaghel,Peter S. Nelson,Mary‐Ellen Taplin,Steven P. Balk
出处
期刊:Cancer Research [American Association for Cancer Research] 日期:2018-06-19卷期号:78 (16): 4716-4730被引量:63
Primary prostate cancer can have extensive microheterogeneity, but its contribution to the later emergence of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) remains unclear. In this study, we microdissected residual prostate cancer foci in radical prostatectomies from 18 men treated with neoadjuvant-intensive androgen deprivation therapy (leuprolide, abiraterone acetate, and prednisone) and analyzed them for resistance mechanisms. Transcriptome profiling showed reduced but persistent androgen receptor (AR) activity in residual tumors, with no increase in neuroendocrine differentiation. Proliferation correlated negatively with AR activity but positively with decreased RB1 expression, and whole-exome sequencing (WES) further showed enrichment for RB1 genomic loss. In 15 cases where 2 or 3 tumor foci were microdissected, WES confirmed a common clonal origin but identified multiple oncogenic alterations unique to each focus. These findings show that subclones with oncogenic alterations found in mCRPC are present in primary prostate cancer and are selected for by neoadjuvant-intense androgen deprivation therapy. In particular, this study indicates that subclonal RB1 loss may be more common than previously appreciated in intermediate- to high-risk primary prostate cancer and may be an early event, independent of neuroendocrine differentiation, in the development of mCRPC. Comprehensive molecular analyses of primary prostate cancer may detect aggressive subclones and possibly inform adjuvant strategies to prevent recurrence.