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Targeted sequencing of 36 known or putative colorectal cancer susceptibility genes

BACKGROUND: Mutations in several genes predispose to colorectal cancer. Genetic testing for hereditary colorectal cancer syndromes was previously limited to single gene tests; thus, only a very limited number of genes were tested, and rarely those infrequently mutated in colorectal cancer. Next‐gene...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: DeRycke, Melissa S., Gunawardena, Shanaka, Balcom, Jessica R., Pickart, Angela M., Waltman, Lindsey A., French, Amy J., McDonnell, Shannon, Riska, Shaun M., Fogarty, Zachary C., Larson, Melissa C., Middha, Sumit, Eckloff, Bruce W., Asmann, Yan W., Ferber, Matthew J., Haile, Robert W., Gallinger, Steven, Clendenning, Mark, Rosty, Christophe, Win, Aung K., Buchanan, Daniel D., Hopper, John L., Newcomb, Polly A., Le Marchand, Loic, Goode, Ellen L., Lindor, Noralane M., Thibodeau, Stephen N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5606870/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28944238
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.317
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Mutations in several genes predispose to colorectal cancer. Genetic testing for hereditary colorectal cancer syndromes was previously limited to single gene tests; thus, only a very limited number of genes were tested, and rarely those infrequently mutated in colorectal cancer. Next‐generation sequencing technologies have made it possible to sequencing panels of genes known and suspected to influence colorectal cancer susceptibility. METHODS: Targeted sequencing of 36 known or putative CRC susceptibility genes was conducted for 1231 CRC cases from five subsets: (1) Familial Colorectal Cancer Type X (n = 153); (2) CRC unselected by tumor immunohistochemical or microsatellite stability testing (n = 548); (3) young onset (age <50 years) (n = 333); (4) proficient mismatch repair (MMR) in cases diagnosed at ≥50 years (n = 68); and (5) deficient MMR CRCs with no germline mutations in MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, or PMS2 (n = 129). Ninety‐three unaffected controls were also sequenced. RESULTS: Overall, 29 nonsense, 43 frame‐shift, 13 splice site, six initiator codon variants, one stop codon, 12 exonic deletions, 658 missense, and 17 indels were identified. Missense variants were reviewed by genetic counselors to determine pathogenicity; 13 were pathogenic, 61 were not pathogenic, and 584 were variants of uncertain significance. Overall, we identified 92 cases with pathogenic mutations in APC,MLH1,MSH2,MSH6, or multiple pathogenic MUTYH mutations (7.5%). Four cases with intact MMR protein expression by immunohistochemistry carried pathogenic MMR mutations. CONCLUSIONS: Results across case subsets may help prioritize genes for inclusion in clinical gene panel tests and underscore the issue of variants of uncertain significance both in well‐characterized genes and those for which limited experience has accumulated.