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Analysis of 100,000 human cancer genomes reveals the landscape of tumor mutational burden
Zachary R. Chalmers, Caitlin Connelly, David Fabrizio, Laurie M. Gay, Siraj M. Ali, Riley Ennis, Alexa B. Schrock, Brittany Campbell, Adam Shlien, Juliann Chmielecki, Franklin W. Huang, Yuting He, James Sun, Uri Tabori, Mark Kennedy
Genome Medicine · 2017 · ▲ 3,719 citations
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High tumor mutational burden (TMB) is an emerging biomarker of sensitivity to immune checkpoint inhibitors and has been shown to be more significantly associated with response to PD-1 and PD-L1 blockade immunotherapy than PD-1 or PD-L1 expression, as measured by immunohistochemistry (IHC). The distribution of TMB and the subset of patients with high TMB has not been well characterized in the majority of cancer types. METHODS: In this study, we compare TMB measured by a targeted comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) assay to TMB measured by exome sequencing and simulate the expected variance in TMB when sequencing less than the whole exome. We then describe the distribution of TMB across a diverse cohort of 100,000 cancer cases and test for association between somatic alterations and TMB in over 100 tumor types. RESULTS: We demonstrate that measurements of TMB from comprehensive genomic profiling are strongly reflective of measurements from whole exome sequencing and model that below 0.5 Mb the variance in measurement increases significantly. We find that a subset of patients exhibits high TMB across almost all types of cancer, including many rare tumor types, and characterize the relationship between high TMB and microsatellite instability status. We find that TMB increases significantly with age, showing a 2.4-fold difference between age 10 and age 90 years. Finally, we investigate the molecular basis of TMB and identify genes and mutations associated with TMB level. We identify a cluster of somatic mutations in the promoter of the gene PMS2, which occur in 10% of skin cancers and are highly associated with increased TMB. CONCLUSIONS: These results show that a CGP assay targeting ~1.1 Mb of coding genome can accurately assess TMB compared with sequencing the whole exome. Using this method, we find that many disease types have a substantial portion of patients with high TMB who might benefit from immunotherapy. Finally, we identify novel, recurrent promoter mutations in PMS2, which may be another example of regulatory mutations contributing to tumorigenesis.
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- DOI
- 10.1186/s13073-017-0424-2
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- 2026-06-02 MST
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APA
Chalmers, Z.R., Connelly, C., Fabrizio, D., Gay, L.M., Ali, S.M., Ennis, R., Schrock, A.B., Campbell, B., Shlien, A., Chmielecki, J., Huang, F.W., He, Y., Sun, J., Tabori, U., Kennedy, M., Lieber, D.S., Roels, S., White, J., Otto, G.A., & Ross, J.S. (2017). Analysis of 100,000 human cancer genomes reveals the landscape of tumor mutational burden. <em>Genome Medicine</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-017-0424-2
Vancouver
Chalmers ZR, Connelly C, Fabrizio D, Gay LM, Ali SM, Ennis R, et al. Analysis of 100,000 human cancer genomes reveals the landscape of tumor mutational burden. Genome Medicine. 2017. doi:10.1186/s13073-017-0424-2.
BibTeX
@article{zachary2017Analys,
title = {Analysis of 100,000 human cancer genomes reveals the landscape of tumor mutational burden},
author = {Zachary R. Chalmers and Caitlin Connelly and David Fabrizio and Laurie M. Gay and Siraj M. Ali and Riley Ennis and Alexa B. Schrock and Brittany Campbell and Adam Shlien and Juliann Chmielecki and Franklin W. Huang and Yuting He and James Sun and Uri Tabori and Mark Kennedy and Daniel S. Lieber and Steven Roels and Jared White and Geoffrey A. Otto and Jeffrey S. Ross and Levi A. Garraway and Vincent A. Miller and P. J. Stephens and Garrett M. Frampton},
journal = {Genome Medicine},
year = {2017},
doi = {10.1186/s13073-017-0424-2},
}
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