EPCO-32. PROSPECTIVE GERMLINE SEQUENCING OF PATIENTS WITH GLIOMAS, GLIONEURONAL OR NEURONAL TUMORS

Abstract BACKGROUND Several genetic syndromes have been linked to the development of central nervous system (CNS) tumors; however, the prevalence and clinical significance of germline pathogenic variants in this population remain unclear. METHODS 2,367 patients with a glioma, glioneuronal, or neuron...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuro-oncology (Charlottesville, Va.) Va.), 2024-11, Vol.26 (Supplement_8), p.viii8-viii8
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Andrew, Nandakumar, Subhiksha, Mehine, Miika, Kemel, Yelena, Mandelker, Diana, Karajannis, Matthias, Sait, Sameer Farouk, Gavrilovic, Igor, Pentsova, Elena, Schaff, Lauren, Stone, Jacqueline, Nolan, Craig, Boire, Adrienne, Grommes, Christian, Santomasso, Bianca, Diamond, Eli, Wilcox, Jessica, Piotrowski, Anna, Kaley, Thomas, Young, Robert, Imber, Brandon, Brennan, Cameron, Moss, Nelson, Tabar, Viviane, Rosenblum, Marc, Bale, Tejus, DeAngelis, Lisa, Mellinghoff, Ingo, Berger, Michael, Stadler, Zsofia, Schultz, Nicholas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract BACKGROUND Several genetic syndromes have been linked to the development of central nervous system (CNS) tumors; however, the prevalence and clinical significance of germline pathogenic variants in this population remain unclear. METHODS 2,367 patients with a glioma, glioneuronal, or neuronal tumor (WHO grade 1-4) ages 0.2-93.8 years underwent tumor and matched normal sequencing with MSK-IMPACT. Germline variants and copy-number variants affecting 90 well-established cancer predisposing genes were analyzed; the presence of biallelic inactivation was determined using FACETS. RESULTS Eleven percent harbored germline pathogenic mutations in high-, moderate-, and low-penetrance genes. High- and moderate-penetrance genes included CHEK2 (n=32, 1.3%), BRCA2 (n=10; 0.4%), TP53 (n=9; 0.4%), NF1 (n=6; 0.2%), and mismatch repair (MMR) genes (n=20, 0.9%). Low-penetrance genes included monoallelic MUTYH (n=42; 1.8%) and the APC I1307K variant (n=28, 1.2%). Biallelic inactivation was found in all tumors from patients with germline TP53 and NF1 mutations, with lower rates in tumors from patients with a germline MMR alteration (53%). Biallelic inactivation was rare among patients with a germline mutation in homologous recombination pathway (HRD) genes (27%), and in the aforementioned low-penetrance APC (15.3%) and MUTYH (10.2%) variants. All patients with biallelic inactivation of an MMR gene were hypermutated. Biallelic inactivation of MMR genes and TP53 were observed in IDH-mutant astrocytoma and IDH-WT gliomas, while biallelic inactivation of NF1 and somatic IDH1/2 mutation were mutually exclusive. When examining the age at diagnosis among patients with germline alterations, tumors with biallelic inactivation were diagnosed at a younger age compared to tumors with monoallelic alterations (37.7 vs 51.6 years, p=0.002). CONCLUSION Clinical germline sequencing identifies a germline mutation in a high proportion of patients with CNS tumors. Biallelic inactivation was most commonly identified in tumors from patients with germline TP53 or NF1 mutations and were less common in patients with a germline MMR alteration.
ISSN:1522-8517
1523-5866
DOI:10.1093/neuonc/noae165.0031