ALEXANDROV LAB

Netflix-style Algorithm Builds Blueprint of Cancer Genomes

The science behind predicting your viewing habits on Netflix could one day be used to guide doctors in managing some of the hardest-to-treat cancers, shows a study led by the University of California San Diego and University College London.

The researchers used artificial intelligence to analyze and categorize the size and scale of DNA changes across the genome when cancer starts and grows. By analyzing genomes from 9,873 patients with 33 types of cancer, the scientists found 21 categories of common changes to the structure and number of chromosomes in the genetic material of tumors.

These categories of common DNA changes, known as copy number signatures, could be used to build a blueprint to predict how a cancer is likely to progress and design the most effective treatments for it. The findings are reported in a paper published June 15 in Nature.