Clinicogenomic characterization of inflammatory breast cancer.

Nolan Priedigkeit, Beth Harrison, Robert Shue, Melissa Hughes, Yvonne Li, Gregory J Kirkner, Liam F Spurr, Marie Claire Remolano, Sarah Strauss, Janet Files, Anne-Marie Feeney, Libby Grant, Ayesha Mohammed-Abreu, Ana Garrido-Castro, Romualdo Barroso Sousa, Brittany Bychkovsky, Faina Nakhlis, Jennifer R Bellon, Tari A King, Eric P Winer, Neal Lindeman, Bruce E Johnson, Lynette Sholl, Deborah Dillon, Beth Overmoyer, Sara M Tolaney, Andrew Cherniack, Nancy U Lin, Filipa Lynce

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology(2024)

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摘要
Background:Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is a rare and poorly characterized type of breast cancer with an aggressive clinical presentation. The biological mechanisms driving the IBC phenotype are relatively undefined-partially due to a lack of comprehensive, large-scale genomic studies and limited clinical cohorts. Patients and Methods:A retrospective analysis of 2457 patients with metastatic breast cancer who underwent targeted tumor-only DNA-sequencing was performed at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Clinicopathologic, single nucleotide variant (SNV), copy number variant (CNV) and tumor mutational burden (TMB) comparisons were made between clinically confirmed IBC cases within a dedicated IBC center versus non-IBC cases. Results:Clinicopathologic differences between IBC and non-IBC cases were consistent with prior reports-including IBC being associated with younger age at diagnosis, higher grade, and enrichment with hormone receptor (HR)-negative and HER2-positive tumors. The most frequent somatic alterations in IBC involved TP53 (72%), ERBB2 (32%), PIK3CA (24%), CCND1 (12%), MYC (9%), FGFR1 (8%) and GATA3 (8%). A multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed a significant enrichment in TP53 SNVs in IBC; particularly in HER2-positive and HR-positive disease which was associated with worse outcomes. Tumor mutational burden (TMB) did not differ substantially between IBC and non-IBC cases and a pathway analysis revealed an enrichment in NOTCH pathway alterations in HER2-positive disease. Conclusion:Taken together, this study provides a comprehensive, clinically informed landscape of somatic alterations in a large cohort of patients with IBC. Our data support higher frequency of TP53 mutations and a potential enrichment in NOTCH pathway activation-but overall; a lack of major genomic differences. These results both reinforce the importance of TP53 alterations in IBC pathogenesis as well as their influence on clinical outcomes; but also suggest additional analyses beyond somatic DNA-level changes are warranted.
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