A clinical guide to hereditary cancer panel testing: evaluation of gene-specific cancer associations and sensitivity of genetic testing criteria in a cohort of 165,000 high-risk patients
Purpose Despite the rapid uptake of multigene panel testing (MGPT) for hereditary cancer predisposition, there is limited guidance surrounding indications for testing and genes to include. Methods To inform the clinical approach to hereditary cancer MGPT, we comprehensively evaluated 32 cancer predi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Genetics in medicine 2020-02, Vol.22 (2), p.407-415 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose
Despite the rapid uptake of multigene panel testing (MGPT) for hereditary cancer predisposition, there is limited guidance surrounding indications for testing and genes to include.
Methods
To inform the clinical approach to hereditary cancer MGPT, we comprehensively evaluated 32 cancer predisposition genes by assessing phenotype-specific pathogenic variant (PV) frequencies, cancer risk associations, and performance of genetic testing criteria in a cohort of 165,000 patients referred for MGPT.
Results
We identified extensive genetic heterogeneity surrounding predisposition to cancer types commonly referred for germline testing (breast, ovarian, colorectal, uterine/endometrial, pancreatic, and melanoma). PV frequencies were highest among patients with ovarian cancer (13.8%) and lowest among patients with melanoma (8.1%). Fewer than half of PVs identified in patients meeting testing criteria for only
BRCA1/2
or only Lynch syndrome occurred in the respective genes (33.1% and 46.2%). In addition, 5.8% of patients with PVs in
BRCA1/2
and 26.9% of patients with PVs in Lynch syndrome genes did not meet respective testing criteria.
Conclusion
Opportunities to improve upon identification of patients at risk for hereditary cancer predisposition include revising
BRCA1/2
and Lynch syndrome testing criteria to include additional clinically actionable genes with overlapping phenotypes and relaxing testing criteria for associated cancers. |
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ISSN: | 1098-3600 1530-0366 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41436-019-0633-8 |