Homologous recombination pathway gene variants identified by tumor-only sequencing assays in lung carcinoma patients

The homologous recombination (HR) repair pathway plays a key role in double-stranded DNA break repair, and germline HR pathway gene variants are associated with increased risk of several cancers, including breast and ovarian cancer. HR deficiency is also a therapeutically targetable phenotype. Somat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Translational lung cancer research 2023-06, Vol.12 (6), p.1236-1244
Hauptverfasser: Yoon, Ju-Yoon, Roth, Jacquelyn J, Rushton, Chase A, Morrissette, Jennifer J D, Nathanson, Katherine L, Cohen, Roger B, Rosenbaum, Jason N
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The homologous recombination (HR) repair pathway plays a key role in double-stranded DNA break repair, and germline HR pathway gene variants are associated with increased risk of several cancers, including breast and ovarian cancer. HR deficiency is also a therapeutically targetable phenotype. Somatic (tumour-only) sequencing was performed on 1,109 cases of lung tumors, and the pathological data were reviewed to filter for lung primary carcinomas. Cases were filtered for variants (disease-associated or of uncertain significance) in 14 HR pathway genes, including , , and . The clinical, pathological and molecular data were reviewed. Sixty-one HR pathway gene variants in 56 patients with primary lung cancer were identified. Further filtering by variant allele fraction (VAF) of ≥30% identified 17 HR pathway gene variants in 17 patients. gene variants were most the commonly identified (9/17), including two patients with c.7271T>G (p.V2424G), a variant in the germline that is associated with increased familial cancer risk. Four (4/17) patients had a family history of lung cancer, among which three patients had gene variants suspected to be germline in origin. In three other patients with or gene variants who had undergone germline testing, the variants were confirmed to be germline; lung cancer was the sentinel cancer in two of these patients with a or variant. Genomic variants in the HR repair pathway identified in tumor-only sequencing and occurring at higher VAFs (i.e., ≥30%) may suggest a germline origin. Correlating with personal and family history, a subset of these variants is also suggested to be associated with familial cancer risks. Patient age, smoking history and driver mutation status are expected to be a poor screening tool in identifying these patients. Finally, the relative enrichment for variants in our cohort suggests a possible association between mutation and lung cancer risk.
ISSN:2218-6751
2226-4477
DOI:10.21037/tlcr-22-749