Abstract Background Cancer is a somatic evolutionary disease and adenocarcinomas of the stomach and gastroesophageal junction (GC) may serve as a two-dimensional model of cancer expansion, in which tumor subclones are not evenly mixed during tumor progression but rather spatially separated and diversified. We hypothesize that precision medicine efforts are compromised when clinical decisions are based on a single-sample analysis, which ignores the mechanisms of cancer evolution and resulting intratumoral heterogeneity. Using multiregional whole-exome sequencing, we investigated the effect of somatic evolution on intratumoral heterogeneity aiming to shed light on the evolutionary biology of GC. Methods The study comprised a prospective disco...
The presence of multiple subclones within tumors mandates understanding of longitudinal and spatial ...
The presence of multiple subclones within tumors mandates understanding of longitudinal and spatial ...
Next-generation sequencing data from human cancers are often difficult to interpret within the conte...
markdownabstractBackground: Intratumor heterogeneity has been demonstrated in several cancer types, ...
Precision medicine requires an understanding of cancer genes and mutational processes, as well as an...
Abstract Analysis of spatial and temporal genetic heterogeneity in human cancers has revealed that s...
Cancer is a disease of genome instability and genomic alterations; now, genomic heterogeneity is rap...
Cancer is a disease of genome instability and genomic alterations; now, genomic heterogeneity is rap...
Cancer is a disease of genome instability and genomic alterations; now, genomic heterogeneity is rap...
Abstract Background Intratumor heterogeneity has been demonstrated in several cancer types, followin...
Precision medicine requires an understanding of cancer genes and mutational processes, as well as an...
Gastric cancer (GC) is a highly heterogeneous disease. To identify potential clinically actionable t...
Intratumour heterogeneity complicates biomarker discovery and treatment personalization, and pervasi...
The presence of multiple subclones within tumors mandates understanding of longitudinal and spatial ...
Given the implications of tumor dynamics for precision medicine, there is a need to systematically c...
The presence of multiple subclones within tumors mandates understanding of longitudinal and spatial ...
The presence of multiple subclones within tumors mandates understanding of longitudinal and spatial ...
Next-generation sequencing data from human cancers are often difficult to interpret within the conte...
markdownabstractBackground: Intratumor heterogeneity has been demonstrated in several cancer types, ...
Precision medicine requires an understanding of cancer genes and mutational processes, as well as an...
Abstract Analysis of spatial and temporal genetic heterogeneity in human cancers has revealed that s...
Cancer is a disease of genome instability and genomic alterations; now, genomic heterogeneity is rap...
Cancer is a disease of genome instability and genomic alterations; now, genomic heterogeneity is rap...
Cancer is a disease of genome instability and genomic alterations; now, genomic heterogeneity is rap...
Abstract Background Intratumor heterogeneity has been demonstrated in several cancer types, followin...
Precision medicine requires an understanding of cancer genes and mutational processes, as well as an...
Gastric cancer (GC) is a highly heterogeneous disease. To identify potential clinically actionable t...
Intratumour heterogeneity complicates biomarker discovery and treatment personalization, and pervasi...
The presence of multiple subclones within tumors mandates understanding of longitudinal and spatial ...
Given the implications of tumor dynamics for precision medicine, there is a need to systematically c...
The presence of multiple subclones within tumors mandates understanding of longitudinal and spatial ...
The presence of multiple subclones within tumors mandates understanding of longitudinal and spatial ...
Next-generation sequencing data from human cancers are often difficult to interpret within the conte...