Clonal evolution analysis of paired anaplastic and well-differentiated thyroid carcinomas reveals shared common ancestor

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Abstract

Foci of papillary or follicular thyroid carcinoma are frequently noted in thyroidectomy specimens of anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC). However, whether ATCs evolve from these co-existing well-differentiated thyroid carcinomas (WDTCs) has not been well-understood. To investigate the progression of ATC in patients with co-existing WDTCs, five ATC tumors with co-existing WDTCs and matching normal tissues were whole-exome sequenced. After mapping the somatic alteration landscape, evolutionary lineages were constructed by sub-clone analysis. Though each tumor harbored at least some unique private mutations, all five ATCs demonstrated numerous overlapping mutations with matched WDTCs. Clonal analysis further demonstrated that each ATC/WDTC pair shared a common ancestor, with some pairs diverging early in their evolution and others in which the ATC seems to arise directly from a sub-clone of the WDTC. Though the precise lineal relationship remains ambiguous, based on the genetic relationship, our study clearly suggests a shared origin of ATC and WDTC.

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Dong, W., Nicolson, N. G., Choi, J., Barbieri, A. L., Kunstman, J. W., Abou Azar, S., … Carling, T. (2018). Clonal evolution analysis of paired anaplastic and well-differentiated thyroid carcinomas reveals shared common ancestor. Genes Chromosomes and Cancer, 57(12), 645–652. https://doi.org/10.1002/gcc.22678

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