Abstract
Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNETs) are uncommon cancers arising from pancreatic islet cells. Analysis of gene mutation, copy number and RNA expression of 57 sporadic pNETs showed that pNET genomes are dominated by aneuploidy. Remarkably, ~25% of pNETs had genomes characterized by recurrent loss of heterozygosity (LoH) of the same 10 chromosomes, accompanied by bi-allelic MEN1 inactivation, and these cases had generally poor clinical outcome. Another ~25% of all pNETs had chromosome 11 LoH and bi-allelic MEN1 inactivation, lacking the recurrent LoH pattern – these had universally good clinical outcome. Some level of aneuploidy was common, and overall ~80% of pNETs had LoH of ≥1 chromosome. This aneuploidy led to changes in RNA expression at the level of whole chromosomes and allowed pathogenic germline variants (e.g. ATM) to be expressed unopposed, inactivating downstream tumor suppressor pathways. Some pNETs appear to utilize VHL gene methylation or mutation to activate pseudo-hypoxia. Contrary to expectation neither tumor morphology within well-differentiated pNETs nor single gene mutation had significant associations with clinical outcome, nor did expression of RNAs reflecting the activity of immune, differentiation, proliferative or tumor suppressor pathways. MEN1 was the only statistically significant recurrently mutated driver gene in pNETs. Only one pNET had clearly oncogenic and actionable SNVs (in PTEN and FLCN) confirmed by corroborating RNA expression changes. The two distinct patterns of aneuploidy described here, associated with markedly poor and good clinical outcome respectively, define a novel oncogenic mechanism and the first route to genomic precision oncology for this tumor type.