Non-muscle-invasive bladder cancers (NMIBC) and muscle-invasive bladder cancers (MIBC) show distinct molecular and clinical features and are considered to follow different pathogenesis pathways. MIBC commonly metastasise (>50%) and have poor prognosis whereas NMIBC, particularly low-stage low-grade tumors, rarely progress to invade muscle (<5%). Patients diagnosed with NMIBC frequently suffer disease recurrence, demanding long-term disease monitoring and repeated resection of recurrences. Large MIBC cohorts have been extensively interrogated on a genome-wide scale but relatively few NMIBC have been studied at this level. To address this we determined the mutational landscape of 82 non-muscle-invasive tumors (stage Ta grade 2) using whole-exome and targeted deep sequencing. Whole-exome sequencing identified an average of 124±79 synonymous and non-synonymous somatic mutations (single nucleotide substitutions and indels) per sample, giving mean and median somatic mutation rates of 2.41 and 1.64 per megabase, respectively. Overall, 47% of nucleotide substitutions were C>T transitions, followed by C>G transversions (24.8%). Similar to MIBC, APOBEC mutagenesis was the strongest source of mutation in NMIBC with 75% of samples showing up to 5-fold enrichment of the APOBEC mutation signature. Significantly mutated genes included genes implicated in epigenetic regulation and several genes that have not previously been reported as significantly mutated in bladder cancer. Comparison of mutation frequencies in NMIBC with those found in MIBC revealed both known differences (absence of TP53 mutations and high frequency of FGFR3, PIK3CA and STAG2 mutations in NMIBC) and novel findings including a higher frequency of mutations in chromatin-state regulators in NMIBC. Notably CDKN1A, RB1, ERCC2, ERBB3 and FBXW7, which are mutated in >10% of MIBC were not significantly mutated in TaG2 tumors, further delineating the distinct pathogenesis pathways of NMIBC and MIBC. Whole-genome expression array profiling and immunohistochemistry using a panel of markers were carried out to further examine the molecular features of NMIBC samples and define potentially clinically relevant subtypes. These data provide a detailed view of the genomic landscape of NMIBC that highlights chromatin modification as a key area for consideration in the development of potential future therapeutic approaches to the treatment of patients with non-muscle-invasive disease.
Citation Format: Carolyn D. Hurst, Olivia Alder, Fiona M. Platt, Alastair Droop, Lucy F. Stead, Julie E. Burns, George J. Burghel, Sunjay Jain, Leszek J. Klimczak, Helen Lindsay, Jo-An Roulson, Claire F. Taylor, Helene Thygesen, Angus J. Cameron, Anne J. Ridley, Helene R. Mott, Dmitry A. Gordenin, Margaret A. Knowles. The genomic landscape of non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer: implications for molecular classification and treatment. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2016 Apr 16-20; New Orleans, LA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(14 Suppl):Abstract nr LB-323.