Acquired Cross-resistance in Small Cell Lung Cancer due to Extrachromosomal DNA Amplification of MYC paralogs.
Shreoshi Pal ChoudhuriLuc GirardJun Yi Stanley LimJillian F WiseBraeden FreitasDi YangEdmond WongSeth HamiltonVictor D ChienYoon Jung KimCollin GilbreathJun ZhongSarah PhatDavid T MyersCamilla L ChristensenHanieh Mazloom-FarsibafMarcello StanzioneKwok-Kin WongYin Pun HungAnna F FaragoCatherine B MeadorNicholas J DysonMichael S LawrenceSihan WuBenjamin J DrapkinPublished in: Cancer discovery (2024)
Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) presents as a highly chemosensitive malignancy but acquires cross-resistance after relapse. This transformation is nearly inevitable in patients but has been difficult to capture in laboratory models. Here, we present a pre-clinical system that recapitulates acquired cross-resistance, developed from 51 patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models. Each model was tested in vivo against three clinical regimens: cisplatin plus etoposide, olaparib plus temozolomide, and topotecan. These drug-response profiles captured hallmark clinical features of SCLC, such as the emergence of treatment-refractory disease after early relapse. For one patient, serial PDX models revealed that cross-resistance was acquired through MYC amplification on extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA). Genomic and transcriptional profiles of the full PDX panel revealed that MYC paralog amplifications on ecDNAs were recurrent in relapsed cross-resistant SCLC, and this was corroborated in tumor biopsies from relapsed patients. We conclude that ecDNAs with MYC paralogs are recurrent drivers of cross-resistance in SCLC.
Keyphrases
- small cell lung cancer
- end stage renal disease
- transcription factor
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- nucleic acid
- acute myeloid leukemia
- prognostic factors
- emergency department
- gene expression
- single molecule
- hodgkin lymphoma
- oxidative stress
- case report
- single cell
- brain metastases
- heat shock
- adverse drug