Abstract Black women of African ancestry experience more aggressive breast cancer with higher mortality rates than White women of European ancestry. Although inter-ethnic germline variation is known, differential somatic evolution has not been investigated in detail. Analysis of deep whole genomes of 97 breast tumors, with RNA-seq in a subset, from indigenous African patients in Nigeria in comparison to The Cancer Genome Atlas (n=76) revealed a higher rate of genomic instability and increased intra-tumoral heterogeneity as well as a unique genomic subtype defined by early clonal GATA3 mutations and a 10.5-year younger age at diagnosis. We also found evidence for non-coding mutations in two novel drivers ( ZNF217 and SYPL1 ) and a novel INDEL signature strongly associated with African ancestry proportion. This comprehensive analysis of an understudied population underscores the need to incorporate diversity of genomes as a key parameter in fundamental research with potential to tailor clinical intervention and promote equity in precision oncology care.
This paper's license is marked as closed access or non-commercial and cannot be viewed on ResearchHub. Visit the paper's external site.