Integrated multiomic profiling of breast cancer in the Chinese population reveals patient stratification and therapeutic vulnerabilities.
Yi-Zhou JiangDing MaXi JinYi XiaoYing YuJinxiu ShiYi-Fan ZhouTong FuCai-Jin LinLei-Jie DaiCheng-Lin LiuShen ZhaoGuan-Hua SuWanwan HouYa-Qing LiuQing-Wang ChenJingcheng YangNaixin ZhangWen-Juan ZhangWei LiuWeigang GeWen-Tao YangChao YouYajia GuVirginia KaklamaniFrançois BertucciClaire VerschraegenAnneleen DaemenNakul M ShahTing WangTiannan GuoLe-Ming ShiCharles M PerouYuanting ZhengWei HuangZhi-Ming ShaoPublished in: Nature cancer (2024)
Molecular profiling guides precision treatment of breast cancer; however, Asian patients are underrepresented in publicly available large-scale studies. We established a comprehensive multiomics cohort of 773 Chinese patients with breast cancer and systematically analyzed their genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolomic, radiomic and digital pathology characteristics. Here we show that compared to breast cancers in white individuals, Asian individuals had more targetable AKT1 mutations. Integrated analysis revealed a higher proportion of HER2-enriched subtype and correspondingly more frequent ERBB2 amplification and higher HER2 protein abundance in the Chinese HR + HER2 + cohort, stressing anti-HER2 therapy for these individuals. Furthermore, comprehensive metabolomic and proteomic analyses revealed ferroptosis as a potential therapeutic target for basal-like tumors. The integration of clinical, transcriptomic, metabolomic, radiomic and pathological features allowed for efficient stratification of patients into groups with varying recurrence risks. Our study provides a public resource and new insights into the biology and ancestry specificity of breast cancer in the Asian population, offering potential for further precision treatment approaches.