Investigator

Leonardo Ferreira

Fellow · Boston Children's Hospital, Clinical Informatics

LFLeonardo Ferreira
Papers(1)
Genomic Landscapes of…
Collaborators(10)
Luis AparicioMark A. EckertMichael F. PressNicholas A. VulpescuNita AhujaNoushin NiknafsOfer LavieRobert B. ScharpfRonny DrapkinSarah H. Kim
Institutions(5)
Johns Hopkins Univers…University Of ChicagoUniversity Of Souther…Carmel Medical CenterUniversity of Pennsyl…

Papers

Genomic Landscapes of Endometrioid and Mucinous Ovarian Cancers and Morphologically Similar Tumor Types

Abstract Endometrioid and mucinous ovarian carcinomas represent nearly a fifth of ovarian cancers, but their molecular characteristics and pathologic origins are poorly understood. To identify the genomic and epigenomic alterations characteristic of these ovarian cancer subtypes and evaluate links to morphologically similar tumors from other sites, we performed a combination of sequence, copy number, mutation signature, and rearrangement analyses from tumor samples and matched normal tissues of 133 patients, as well as methylation analyses of these tumors and tissues of 150 patients from The Cancer Genome Atlas. Genomic analyses included samples from patients with ovarian endometrioid (n = 44), ovarian mucinous (n = 43), uterine endometrioid (n = 15), and gastrointestinal mucinous carcinomas (n = 31), including mucinous carcinomas of the stomach, colon, and pancreas. In addition to identifying genes previously known to be involved in these tumors, we identified alterations in RAD51C, NOTCH4, SMARCA1/4, and JAK1 in ovarian endometrioid, ESR1 in uterine endometrioid, and SMARCA4 in ovarian mucinous carcinomas. Whole-genome sequencing revealed rearrangements involving PTEN, NF1, and NF2 in ovarian endometrioid carcinomas and NF1 and MED1 in ovarian mucinous carcinomas. The number of alterations, affected genes, and genome-wide methylation profiles were not distinguishable between ovarian and uterine endometrioid carcinomas, supporting the hypothesis that these tumors share a tissue of origin. In contrast, mutation and methylation patterns in ovarian mucinous carcinomas were different from gastrointestinal mucinous carcinomas. These analyses provide insights into the genomic landscapes and origins of mucinous and endometrioid ovarian carcinomas, providing new avenues for early clinical intervention and management of patients with these cancers. Significance: Integrative multi-omic analyses support a common tissue of origin between ovarian endometrioid and uterine endometrioid carcinomas but not between ovarian mucinous and gastric or pancreatic mucinous carcinomas.

30Works
1Papers
33Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsCarcinoma, EndometrioidBrain NeoplasmsBiomarkers, TumorColorectal NeoplasmsLiver NeoplasmsNeoplasm Metastasis

Positions

2025–

Fellow

Boston Children's Hospital · Clinical Informatics

2021–

Resident

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center · Pediatrics / Human Genetics

2019–

Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Johns Hopkins University · Oncology

Education

2017

M.D.

Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro · School of Medicine

2015

M.Sc.

Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro · Molecular Biology and Genetics