The evolutionary history of 2,658 cancers.
Moritz Gerstung,
Clemency Jolly,
Ignaty Leshchiner,
Stefan C Dentro,
Santiago Gonzalez,
Daniel Rosebrock,
Thomas J Mitchell,
Yulia Rubanova,
Pavana Anur,
Kaixian Yu,
Maxime Tarabichi,
Amit Deshwar,
Jeff Wintersinger,
Kortine Kleinheinz,
Ignacio Vázquez-García,
Kerstin Haase,
Lara Jerman,
Subhajit Sengupta,
Geoff Macintyre,
Salem Malikic,
Nilgun Donmez,
Dimitri G Livitz,
Marek Cmero,
Jonas Demeulemeester,
Steven Schumacher,
Yu Fan,
Xiaotong Yao,
Juhee Lee,
Matthias Schlesner,
Paul C Boutros,
David D Bowtell,
Hongtu Zhu,
Gad Getz,
Marcin Imielinski,
Rameen Beroukhim,
S Cenk Sahinalp,
Yuan Ji,
Martin Peifer,
Florian Markowetz,
Ville Mustonen,
Ke Yuan,
Wenyi Wang,
Quaid D Morris,
Paul T Spellman,
David C Wedge,
Peter Van Loo
Mar 10, 2020
Cancer develops through a process of somatic evolution1,2. Sequencing data from a single biopsy represent a snapshot of this process that can reveal the timing of specific genomic aberrations and the changing influence of...