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Lineage-Independent Tumors in Bilateral Neuroblastoma

Tim Coorens, Sarah J. Farndon, Thomas J. Mitchell, Neha Jain, Sang-Jin Lee, Michael Hubank, Neil J. Sebire, John Anderson, Sam Behjati

2020New England Journal of Medicine34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Childhood tumors that occur synchronously in different anatomical sites usually represent metastatic disease. However, such tumors can be independent neoplasms. We investigated whether cases of bilateral neuroblastoma represented independent tumors in two children with pathogenic germline mutations by genotyping somatic mutations shared between tumors and blood. Our results suggested that in both children, the lineages that had given rise to the tumors had segregated within the first cell divisions of the zygote, without being preceded by a common premalignant clone. In one patient, the tumors had parallel evolution, including distinct second hits in SMARCA4, a putative predisposition gene for neuroblastoma. These findings portray cases of bilateral neuroblastoma as having independent lesions mediated by a germline predisposition. (Funded by Children with Cancer UK and Wellcome.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroblastomaGermlineSMARCA4BiologyLineage (genetic)Germline mutationSomatic cellGenotypingclone (Java method)Cancer researchMutationPathologyGeneGeneticsMedicineGenotypeTranscription factorCell cultureChromatin remodelingNeuroblastoma Research and TreatmentsNeurofibromatosis and Schwannoma CasesNeuroendocrine Tumor Research Advances