The Clinical and Genetic Landscape of Hereditary Cancer: Experience from a Single Clinical Diagnostic Laboratory

The application of next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology in the genetic investigation of hereditary cancer is important for clinical surveillance, therapeutic approach, and reducing the risk of developing new malignancies. The aim of the study was to explore genetic predisposition in individua...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer genomics & proteomics 2024-09, Vol.21 (5), p.448-463
Hauptverfasser: Tsoulos, Nikolaos, Agiannitopoulos, Konstantinos, Potska, Kevisa, Katseli, Anastasia, Ntogka, Christina, Pepe, Georgia, Bouzarelou, Dimitra, Papathanasiou, Athanasios, Grigoriadis, Dimitrios, Tsaousis, Georgios N, Gogas, Helen, Troupis, Theodore, Papazisis, Konstantinos, Natsiopoulos, Ioannis, Venizelos, Vassileios, Amarantidis, Kyriakos, Giassas, Stylianos, Papadimitriou, Christos, Fountzilas, Elena, Stathoulopoulou, Maroulio, Koumarianou, Anna, Xepapadakis, Grigorios, Blidaru, Alexandru, Zob, Daniela, Voinea, Oana, Özdoğan, Mustafa, Ergören, Mahmut Çerkez, Hegmane, Alinta, Papadopoulou, Eirini, Nasioulas, George, Markopoulos, Christos
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The application of next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology in the genetic investigation of hereditary cancer is important for clinical surveillance, therapeutic approach, and reducing the risk of developing new malignancies. The aim of the study was to explore genetic predisposition in individuals referred for hereditary cancer. A total of 8,261 individuals were referred for multigene genetic testing, during the period 2020-2023, in the laboratory, and underwent multigene genetic testing using NGS. Among the examined individuals, 56.17% were diagnosed with breast cancer, 6.77% with ovarian cancer, 2.88% with colorectal cancer, 1.91% with prostate cancer, 6.43% were healthy with a significant family history of cancer, while 3.06% had a different type of cancer and 0.21% had not provided any information. Additionally, in 85 women with breast cancer we performed whole exome sequencing analysis. 20% of the examined individuals carried a pathogenic variant. Specifically, 54.8% of the patients had a pathogenic variant in a clinically significant gene (BRCA1, BRCA2, PALB2, RAD51C, PMS2, CDKN2A, MLH1, MSH2, TP53, MSH6, APC, RAD51D, PTEN, RET, CDH1, MEN1, and VHL). Among the different types of pathogenic variants detected, a significant percentage (6.52%) represented copy number variation (CNV). With WES analysis, the following findings were detected: CTC1: c.880C>T, p.(Gln294*); MLH3: c.405del, p.(Asp136Metfs*2), PPM1D: c.1426_1430del, p.(Glu476Leufs*3), and SDHB: c.395A>G, p.(His132Arg). Comprehensive multigene genetic testing is necessary for appropriate clinical management of pathogenic variants' carriers. Additionally, the information obtained is important for determining the risk of malignancy development in family members of the examined individuals.
ISSN:1109-6535
1790-6245
DOI:10.21873/cgp.20463