Whitworth, J;
Smith, PS;
Martin, J-E;
West, H;
Luchetti, A;
Rodger, F;
Clark, G;
Carss, K;
Stephens, J;
Stirrups, K;
et al.
Whitworth, J; Smith, PS; Martin, J-E; West, H; Luchetti, A; Rodger, F; Clark, G; Carss, K; Stephens, J; Stirrups, K; Penkett, C; Mapeta, R; Ashford, S; Megy, K; Shakeel, H; Ahmed, M; Adlard, J; Barwell, J; Brewer, C; Casey, RT; Armstrong, R; Cole, T; Evans, DG; Fostira, F; Greenhalgh, L; Hanson, H; Henderson, A; Hoffman, J; Izatt, L; Kumar, A; Kwong, A; Lalloo, F; Ong, KR; Paterson, J; Park, S-M; Chen-Shtoyerman, R; Searle, C; Side, L; Skytte, A-B; Snape, K; Woodward, ER; NIHR BioResource Rare Diseases Consortium; Tischkowitz, MD; Maher, ER
(2018)
Comprehensive Cancer-Predisposition Gene Testing in an Adult Multiple Primary Tumor Series Shows a Broad Range of Deleterious Variants and Atypical Tumor Phenotypes.
Am J Hum Genet, 103 (1).
pp. 3-18.
ISSN 1537-6605
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.04.013
SGUL Authors: Snape, Katie Mairwen Greenwood
Abstract
Multiple primary tumors (MPTs) affect a substantial proportion of cancer survivors and can result from various causes, including inherited predisposition. Currently, germline genetic testing of MPT-affected individuals for variants in cancer-predisposition genes (CPGs) is mostly targeted by tumor type. We ascertained pre-assessed MPT individuals (with at least two primary tumors by age 60 years or at least three by 70 years) from genetics centers and performed whole-genome sequencing (WGS) on 460 individuals from 440 families. Despite previous negative genetic assessment and molecular investigations, pathogenic variants in moderate- and high-risk CPGs were detected in 67/440 (15.2%) probands. WGS detected variants that would not be (or were not) detected by targeted resequencing strategies, including low-frequency structural variants (6/440 [1.4%] probands). In most individuals with a germline variant assessed as pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P/LP), at least one of their tumor types was characteristic of variants in the relevant CPG. However, in 29 probands (42.2% of those with a P/LP variant), the tumor phenotype appeared discordant. The frequency of individuals with truncating or splice-site CPG variants and at least one discordant tumor type was significantly higher than in a control population (χ2 = 43.642; p ≤ 0.0001). 2/67 (3%) probands with P/LP variants had evidence of multiple inherited neoplasia allele syndrome (MINAS) with deleterious variants in two CPGs. Together with variant detection rates from a previous series of similarly ascertained MPT-affected individuals, the present results suggest that first-line comprehensive CPG analysis in an MPT cohort referred to clinical genetics services would detect a deleterious variant in about a third of individuals.
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