Landscape of driver gene events, biomarkers, and druggable targets identified by whole-genome sequencing of glioblastomas

Publication date

2022-01-21

Authors

van de Geer, Wesley S
Hoogstrate, Youri
Draaisma, Kaspar
Robe, Pierre AORCID 0000-0001-7845-6196
Bins, Sander
Mathijssen, Ron H J
French, Pim
van de Werken, Harmen J G
de Vos, FilipORCID 0000-0002-9082-5991ISNI 0000000395290102

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Article

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cc_by_nc

Abstract

Background: The survival of glioblastoma patients is poor. Median survival after diagnosis is 15 months, despite treatment involving surgical resection, radiotherapy, and/or temozolomide chemotherapy. Identification of novel targets and stratification strategies of glioblastoma patients to improve patient survival is urgently needed. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) is the most comprehensive means to identify such DNA-level targets. We report a unique set of WGS samples along with comprehensive analyses of the glioblastoma genome and potential clinical impact of WGS. Methods: Our cohort consisted of 42 glioblastoma tumor tissue and matched whole-blood samples, which were whole-genome sequenced as part of the CPCT-02 study. Somatic single-nucleotide variants, small insertions/deletions, multi-nucleotide variants, copy-number alterations (CNAs), and structural variants were analyzed. These aberrations were harnessed to investigate driver genes, enrichments in CNAs, mutational signatures, fusion genes, and potential targeted therapies. Results: Tumor mutational burden (TMB) was similar to other WGS efforts (1-342 mutations per megabase pair). Mutational analysis in low TMB samples showed that the age-related CpG demethylation signature was dominant, while hyper- and ultramutated tumors had additional defective DNA mismatch repair signatures and showed microsatellite instability in their genomes. We detected chromothripsis in 24% of our cohort, recurrently on chromosomes 1 and 12. Recurrent noncoding regions only resulted in TERT promoter variants. Finally, we found biomarkers and potentially druggable changes in all but one of our tumor samples. Conclusions: With high-quality WGS data and comprehensive methods, we identified the landscape of driver gene events and druggable targets in glioblastoma patients.

Keywords

genomics, glioblastoma, precision medicine, whole-genome sequencing, Clinical Neurology, Oncology, Surgery, Journal Article

Citation

van de Geer, W S, Hoogstrate, Y, Draaisma, K, Robe, P A, Bins, S, Mathijssen, R H J, French, P, van de Werken, H J G & de Vos, F Y F 2022, 'Landscape of driver gene events, biomarkers, and druggable targets identified by whole-genome sequencing of glioblastomas', Neuro-oncology advances, vol. 4, no. 1, vdab177, pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab177