“…Ninety-five per cent of the patients were under 18 years of age (or age unspecified but confirmed age group paediatric), but available data were included for patients up to 25 years, as these were considered relevant for cancer types that typically peak at a young age. All centres have approved data access and informed consent had been obtained from all patients.External data were downloaded from the European Genome-Phenome Archive (EGA; https://www.ebi.ac.uk/ega/home) using the accession numbers EGAD00001000085, EGAD00001000135, EGAD00001000159, EGAD00001000160, EGAD00001000161, EGAD00001000162, EGAD00001000163, EGAD00001000164, EGAD00001000165, EGAD00001000259, EGAD00001000260, EGAD00001000261, EGAD00001000268, and EGAD00001000269 [49][50][51][52][53][54][55][56][57][58][59][60][61][62] ; internal datasets are related to previous PMIDs 27748748, 27479119, 26923874, 25670083, 25253770, 24972766, 24553142, 25135868, 26632267, 26179511, 24651015, 28726821, 23817572, 25962120, 26294725 17,19,44,63-74 (Supplementary Note 1).The final cohort included 914 individual patients of no more than 25 years of age including primary tumours for 879 patients with 47 matched relapsed tumours, and an additional 35 independent relapsed tumours ( Supplementary Tables 1, 2). Deep-sequencing (~ 30× ) whole-genome data (WGS) were available for 547 samples with matched control, whole-exome sequencing (WES) for 414, and low-coverage whole-genome sequencing (lcWGS) for an additional 54 germline and 186 tumour samples.…”