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Emre Kocakavuk, Kevin Anderson, Kevin Johnson, Frederick Varn, Samirkumar Amin, Floris Barthel, Roel Verhaak, EPCO-15. TUMOR TREATMENT WITH IONIZING RADIATION IS ASSOCIATED WITH A CLINICALLY RELEVANT DELETION SIGNATURE, Neuro-Oncology, Volume 22, Issue Supplement_2, November 2020, Page ii72, https://doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noaa215.294
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Abstract
Diffuse gliomas are highly aggressive brain tumors that invariably relapse despite treatment with chemo- and radiotherapy. Treatment with alkylating chemotherapy can drive tumors to develop a hypermutator phenotype. In contrast, the genomic effects of radiation therapy (RT) remain unknown. We analyzed the mutational spectra following treatment with ionizing radiation in sequencing data from 190 paired primary-recurrent gliomas from the Glioma Longitudinal Analysis (GLASS) dataset and 2249 post-treatment metastatic tumors from the Hartwig Medical Foundation. We identified a significant increase in the frequency of small deletions following radiation therapy that was independent of other factors. These novel deletions demonstrated distinct characteristics when compared to pre-existing deletions present prior to RT-treatment and deletions in RT-untreated tumors. Radiation therapy-acquired deletions were characterized by a larger deletion size (GLASS and metastatic cohort, P = 1.2e-02 and P = 8e-11, respectively; Mann-Whitney U test), an increased distance to repetitive DNA elements (P < 2.2e-16, Kolmogorov-Smirnov test) and a reduction in microhomology at breakpoints (P = 3.2e-02, paired Wilcoxon signed-rank test). These observations suggested that canonical non-homologous end joining (c-NHEJ) was the preferred pathway for DNA double strand break repair of RT-induced DNA damage. Furthermore, radiotherapy resulted in frequent chromosomal deletions and significantly increased frequencies of CDKN2A homozygous deletions. Finally, a high burden of RT-associated deletions was associated with worse clinical outcomes (GLASS and metastatic cohort, P = 4.7e-02, HR = 2.59 [95% CI: 1.01, 6.60] and P = 2.5e-02, HR = 1.43 [95% CI: 1.05, 1.94], respectively; multivariable Cox regression), suggesting that effective repair of RT-induced DNA damage is detrimental to patient survival and that inhibiting c-NHEJ may be a viable strategy for improving the cancer-killing effect of radiotherapy. Taken together, the identified genomic scars as a result of radiation therapy reflect a more aggressive tumor with increased levels of resistance to follow up treatments.
- phenotype
- radiation therapy
- brain tumors
- cancer
- chemotherapy regimen
- chromosome deletion
- cicatrix
- dna
- dna damage
- follow-up
- genes, p16
- genome
- glass
- glioma
- homozygote
- neoplasm metastasis
- protein p16
- neoplasms
- radiation effects
- radiation, ionizing
- treatment outcome
- cox proportional hazards models
- mann-whitney u test
- nonhomologous dna end joining
- dna, double-stranded
- kolmogorov-smirnov test
- killing
- datasets