Whole-genome and transcriptional analysis of treatment-emergent small-cell neuroendocrine prostate cancer demonstrates intraclass heterogeneity

RR Aggarwal, DA Quigley, J Huang, L Zhang… - Molecular Cancer …, 2019 - AACR
Molecular Cancer Research, 2019AACR
Therapeutic resistance in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) can be
accompanied by treatment-emergent small-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (t-SCNC), a
morphologically distinct subtype. We performed integrative whole-genome and-
transcriptome analysis of mCRPC tumor biopsies including paired biopsies after
progression, and multiple samples from the same individual. t-SCNC was significantly less
likely to have amplification of AR or an intergenic AR-enhancer locus, and demonstrated …
Abstract
Therapeutic resistance in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) can be accompanied by treatment-emergent small-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (t-SCNC), a morphologically distinct subtype. We performed integrative whole-genome and -transcriptome analysis of mCRPC tumor biopsies including paired biopsies after progression, and multiple samples from the same individual. t-SCNC was significantly less likely to have amplification of AR or an intergenic AR-enhancer locus, and demonstrated lower expression of AR and its downstream transcriptional targets. Genomic and transcriptional hallmarks of t-SCNC included biallelic loss of RB1, elevated expression levels of CDKN2A and E2F1, and loss of expression of the AR and AR-responsive genes including TMPRSS2 and NKX3-1. We identified three tumors that converted from adenocarcinoma to t-SCNC and demonstrate spatial and temporal intrapatient heterogeneity of metastatic tumors harboring adenocarcinoma, t-SCNC, or mixed expression phenotypes, with implications for treatment strategies in which dual targeting of adenocarcinoma and t-SCNC phenotypes may be necessary.
Implications
The t-SCNC phenotype is characterized by lack of AR enhancer gain and loss of RB1 function, and demonstrates both interindividual and intraindividual heterogeneity.
Visual Overview: http://mcr.aacrjournals.org/content/molcanres/17/6/1235/F1.large.jpg.
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