Rapid evolution and biogeographic spread in a colorectal cancer
Preprint 2019 en
Authors
JA
João M. Alves
SP
Sonia Prado‐Lòpez
JC
José Cameselle‐Teijeiro
Abstract
1 min read
ABSTRACT How and when tumoral clones start spreading to surrounding and distant tissues is currently unclear. Here, we leveraged a model-based evolutionary framework to investigate the demographic and biogeographic history of a colorectal cancer. Our analyses strongly support an early monoclonal metastatic colonization, followed by a rapid population expansion at both primary and secondary sites. Moreover, we infer a hematogenous metastatic spread seemingly under positive selection, plus the return of some tumoral cells from the liver back to the colon lymph nodes. This study illustrates how sophisticated techniques typical of organismal evolution can provide a detailed picture of the complex tumoral dynamics over time and space.
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