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Genetic Alterations in the Molecular Subtypes of Bladder Cancer: Illustration in the Cancer Genome Atlas Dataset

TLDR
The observation showed that some of subtype-enriched mutations and copy number aberrations are clinically actionable, which has direct implications for the clinical management of patients with bladder cancer.
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This article is published in European Urology.The article was published on 2017-09-01 and is currently open access. It has received 176 citations till now.

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A Consensus Molecular Classification of Muscle-invasive Bladder Cancer.

TL;DR: In this paper, a consensus set of six molecular classes (luminal papillary (24%), luminal nonspecified (8), luminal unstable (15), stroma-rich (15%), basal/squamous (35%), and neuroendocrine-like (3%) was identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tumor Evolution and Drug Response in Patient-Derived Organoid Models of Bladder Cancer

TL;DR: A biobank of patient-derived organoid lines that recapitulates the histopathological and molecular diversity of human bladder cancer and indicates that patient- derived bladder tumor organoids represent a faithful model system for studying tumor evolution and treatment response in the context of precision cancer medicine.
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The Circular RNA circPRKCI Promotes Tumor Growth in Lung Adenocarcinoma.

TL;DR: Findings reveal high expression of the circular RNA circPRKCI drives lung adenocarcinoma tumorigenesis and may serve as a potential therapeutic target in patients with lungAdenocARCinoma.
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Molecular Subtypes of Urothelial Bladder Cancer: Results from a Meta-cohort Analysis of 2411 Tumors.

TL;DR: BLCA can be stratified into six molecular subtypes with different overall survival (OS) and molecular features, and molecular subtyping is a promising way to tailor disease management for those who will benefit most.
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Molecular and histopathology directed therapy for advanced bladder cancer

TL;DR: Current evidence for the management of conventional, variant and divergent urothelial cancer subtypes, as well as non-urothelial bladder cancers, are presented, and how the integration of genomic, transcriptomic and proteomic characterization of bladder cancer could guide future therapies are discussed.
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Gene expression in the urinary bladder: a common carcinoma in situ gene expression signature exists disregarding histopathological classification.

TL;DR: Examination of gene expression patterns in superficial transitional cell carcinoma with surrounding CIS, without surrounding CIS lesions, and in muscle invasive carcinomas revealed that a CIS gene expression signature is present not only in CIS biopsies but also in sT CC, mTCC, and, remarkably, in histologically normal urothelium from bladders with CIS.
Journal ArticleDOI

47 INVITED Molecular classification of head and neck squamous cell carcinomas using patterns of gene expression

C. Chung
- 01 Sep 2007 - 
TL;DR: It is shown that gene expression patterns from 60 HNSCC samples assayed on cDNA microarrays allowed categorization of these tumors into four distinct subtypes, which showed statistically significant differences in recurrence-free survival and included a subtype with a possible EGFR-pathway signature.
Journal ArticleDOI

APOBEC Enzymes: Mutagenic Fuel for Cancer Evolution and Heterogeneity

TL;DR: In this article, the authors summarize knowledge of the APOBEC DNA deaminase family in cancer, and their role as driving forces for intratumor heterogeneity and a therapeutic target to limit tumor adaptation.
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Frequently Asked Questions (17)
Q1. What are the contributions in "Genetic alterations in the molecular subtypes of bladder cancer: illustration in the cancer genome atlas dataset" ?

In this paper, the authors showed that the uroA and uroB tumors are enriched with specific genetic alterations. 

Biological effects of these alterations will need to be explored in future functional studies. The precise mechanisms that cause them to appear more ‘ ‘ basal ’ ’ ( at the molecular level, and also in terms of their enrichment with squamous histological features and lethality ) will be very interesting ; their relatively high content of RB1 and NFE2L2 mutations suggests possible mechanisms. The existence of uroB tumors also suggests that basal versus luminal subtype class ‘ ‘ switching ’ ’ is possible. Clinically, it will be interesting to determine whether the uroA and uroB tumors are equally sensitive to FGFR inhibitors. 

Amplification of cyclin D1 was reported in approximately 20% of NMIBCs and MIBCs [1], and amplification of E2F3 was observed in high-grade T1 lesions and MIBCs [[29_TD$DIFF]1,32]. 

TP53 mutation frequencies and/or genomic instability to the formation of these two major gene expression subtypes [[52_TD$DIFF] 8]. 

Recent whole genome mRNA expression profiling studies revealed that bladder cancers can be grouped into molecular subtypes, some of which share clinical properties and gene expression patterns with the intrinsic subtypes of breast cancer and the molecular subtypes found in other solid tumors. 

The most prevalent were inactivating mutations in ERCC2 (12% of tumors) [ [5_TD$DIFF]18], which were linked to sensitivity to neoadjuvant cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy [ [32_TD$DIFF] 5]. 

papillary NMIBCs are rarely lethal but recur almost always, necessitating that patients receive lifelong surveillance; the repeated surgical procedures required to deal with recurrences cause significant anxiety, discomfort, and morbidity, making bladder cancer the most expensive tumor on a per patient basis. 

NMIBCs are prone to recurrence, and it will be important to perform longitudinal studies to determine how often subtype membership is maintained in these recurrences. 

Although the biological consequences of these events have not been defined experimentally, they would be expected to lead to decreased RNA polymerase accessibility, gene silencing, and a less well-differentiated phenotype. 

Although the molecular mechanisms that underlie the benefit produced by chemotherapy in basal tumors are still under investigation, basal human bladder cancer cell lines are more sensitive to cisplatininduced apoptosis than are luminal cell lines (A. Ochoa, D.J. McConkey, unpublished observations). 

even though TCGA cluster IV tumors are heavily infiltrated with lymphocytes, the T cells appear to be more actively suppressed than are the T cells in the tumors that belong to TCGA cluster II luminal subtype [[66_TD$DIFF]76], which could explain why cluster IV tumors are somewhat less sensitive to immune checkpoint blockade. 

Although they cluster together with the squamous/basal tumors in the UNC, MD Anderson, and TCGA classifications, the genetic alterations in the uroB tumors more closely resemble those present in the luminal uroA subtype, supporting the conclusion that they represent progressed versions of the uroA cancers. 

Among the APOBEC genes, APOBEC3B appears to be most commonly overexpressed in solidtumors, and bladder cancers stand out for expressing some of the highest levels of APOBEC3B among all solid malignancies [[20_TD$DIFF] 4]. 

In the phase II trial that led to Food and Drug Administration approval of the drug, patients whose tumors belonged to TCGA cluster II obtained somewhat more benefit than patients whose tumors belonged to the other subtypes, and patients with ‘‘papillary’’ (cluster I) tumors derived little benefit, if at all [ [65_TD$DIFF]75]. 

In addition, as noted above, the uroB subtype may establish a precedent for luminal-to-basal subtype ‘‘switching’’ in bladder cancer. 

Included among them were alterations that were enriched in the breast cancer intrinsic subtypes (TP53, RB1, ERBB2, and PIK3CA), genes that displayed different mutation frequencies in NMIBCs versus MIBCs (FGFR3, KDM6A, and STAG2), and genes that encode for mRNAs that were enriched in basal or luminal MIBCs (EGFR, PPARG, GATA3, ELF3, and ERBB3). 

Given past observations in the molecular subtypes in other cancers, it seemed likely that the molecular subtypes of bladder cancer would contain distinct mutations and CNAs.