Genomic landscape of lung adenocarcinoma in East Asians.
Jianbin ChenHechuan YangAudrey Su Min TeoLidyana Bte AmerFaranak Ghazi SherbafChu Quan TanJacob Josiah Santiago AlvarezBingxin LuJia Qi LimAngela TakanoRahul NaharYin Yeng LeeCheryl Zi Jin PhuaKhi Pin ChuaLisda SutejaPauline Jieqi ChenMei Mei ChangTina Puay Theng KohBoon-Hean OngDevanand AnanthamAnne Ann Ling HsuApoorva GognaChow Wei TooZaw Win AungYi Fei LeeLanying WangTony Kiat Hon LimAndreas WilmPoh Sum ChoiPoh Yong NgChee Keong TohWan-Teck LimSiming MaBing LimJin LiuWai Leong TamAnders Jacobsen SkanderupJoe Poh Sheng YeongEng-Huat TanCaretha L CreasyDaniel Shao-Weng TanAxel Maximilian HillmerWeiwei ZhaiPublished in: Nature genetics (2020)
Lung cancer is the world's leading cause of cancer death and shows strong ancestry disparities. By sequencing and assembling a large genomic and transcriptomic dataset of lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) in individuals of East Asian ancestry (EAS; n = 305), we found that East Asian LUADs had more stable genomes characterized by fewer mutations and fewer copy number alterations than LUADs from individuals of European ancestry. This difference is much stronger in smokers as compared to nonsmokers. Transcriptomic clustering identified a new EAS-specific LUAD subgroup with a less complex genomic profile and upregulated immune-related genes, allowing the possibility of immunotherapy-based approaches. Integrative analysis across clinical and molecular features showed the importance of molecular phenotypes in patient prognostic stratification. EAS LUADs had better prediction accuracy than those of European ancestry, potentially due to their less complex genomic architecture. This study elucidated a comprehensive genomic landscape of EAS LUADs and highlighted important ancestry differences between the two cohorts.