Article Synopsis

  • Patients with estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer often relapse decades after surgery, raising questions about the mechanisms involved in tumor dormancy.
  • The study explores genetic and transcriptional changes in late-relapsing patients and identifies that endocrine therapies induce non-genetic changes that allow some cancer cells to enter a dormant state.
  • Targeting the epigenetic modifications associated with this dormancy may provide new strategies for overcoming resistance to endocrine therapies in breast cancer treatment.

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Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Patients with estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer receive adjuvant endocrine therapies (ET) that delay relapse by targeting clinically undetectable micrometastatic deposits. Yet, up to 50% of patients relapse even decades after surgery through unknown mechanisms likely involving dormancy. To investigate genetic and transcriptional changes underlying tumor awakening, we analyzed late relapse patients and longitudinally profiled a rare cohort treated with long-term neoadjuvant ETs until progression. Next, we developed an in vitro evolutionary study to record the adaptive strategies of individual lineages in unperturbed parallel experiments. Our data demonstrate that ETs induce nongenetic cell state transitions into dormancy in a stochastic subset of cells via epigenetic reprogramming. Single lineages with divergent phenotypes awaken unpredictably in the absence of recurrent genetic alterations. Targeting the dormant epigenome shows promising activity against adapting cancer cells. Overall, this study uncovers the contribution of epigenetic adaptation to the evolution of resistance to ETs.

Significance: This study advances the understanding of therapy-induced dormancy with potential clinical implications for breast cancer. Estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer cells adapt to endocrine treatment by entering a dormant state characterized by strong heterochromatinization with no recurrent genetic changes. Targeting the epigenetic rewiring impairs the adaptation of cancer cells to ETs. See related commentary by Llinas-Bertran et al., p. 704. This article is featured in Selected Articles from This Issue, p. 695.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11061610PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.CD-23-1161DOI Listing

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