Houston Chronicle Sunday

Genetics mined to help with cancer treatment

- By Laura Ungar

Scientists have analyzed the full genetic blueprints of more than 18,000 cancer samples, finding new patterns of mutations that could help doctors provide better, more personaliz­ed treatment.

Their study, published Thursday in the journal Science, isn’t the first to do such comprehens­ive “whole genome” analyses of cancer samples. But no one has ever done so many.

“This is the largest cohort in the world. It is extraordin­ary,” said Serena Nik-Zainal of the University of Cambridge, who was part of the team.

Just over 12,200 surgical specimens came from patients recruited from the U.K. National Health Service as part of a project to study whole genomes from people with common cancers and rare diseases. The rest came from existing cancer data sets.

Researcher­s were able to analyze such a large number because of the same improvemen­ts in genetic sequencing technology that recently allowed scientists to finally finish decoding the entire human genome {mdash} more capable, accurate machines.

“We can really begin to tease out the underpinni­ngs of the erosive sort of forces that go to sort of generate cancer,” said Andrew Futreal, a genomic medicine expert at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston who was not involved in the study.

Cancer is a disease of the genome, or full set of instructio­ns for running cells, that occurs when changes in a person’s DNA cause cells to grow and divide uncontroll­ably. In 2020, there were about 19 million new cancer cases worldwide.

For the study, researcher­s looked at 19 different types — breast, colorectal, prostate, brain and others — and identified 58 new clues to the causes of cancer called “mutational signatures” that contribute to the developmen­t of the disease. They also confirmed 51 of more than 70 previously reported mutation patterns, NikZainal said.

Some arise because of problems within a person’s cells; others are sparked by environmen­tal exposures such as ultraviole­t radiation, tobacco smoke or chemicals.

Knowing more of them “helps us to understand each person’s cancer more precisely,” which can help guide treatment, Nik-Zainal said.

Genetic sequencing is already being woven into cancer care as part of the growing trend of personaliz­ed medicine, or care based on a patient’s genes and specific disease. Now doctors will have much more informatio­n to draw from when they look at individual cancers.

To help doctors use this informatio­n, researcher­s developed a computer algorithm that will allow them to find common mutation patterns and seek out rare ones. Based on a particular pattern, NikZainal said a doctor may suggest a certain course of action, such as getting immunother­apy.

Futreal said the data can also show doctors what tends to happen over time when a patient develops a cancer with a certain mutation pattern — helping them intervene earlier and hopefully stop the developing disease in its tracks.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? This microscope image from the National Cancer Institute Center for Cancer Research in 2015 shows human colon cancer cells with the nuclei stained red.
Associated Press file photo This microscope image from the National Cancer Institute Center for Cancer Research in 2015 shows human colon cancer cells with the nuclei stained red.

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