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Prevalence of deleterious germline variants in risk genes including BRCA1/2 in consecutive ovarian cancer patients (AGO-TR-1)

BACKGROUND: Identification of families at risk for ovarian cancer offers the opportunity to consider prophylactic surgery thus reducing ovarian cancer mortality. So far, identification of potentially affected families in Germany was solely performed via family history and numbers of affected family...

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Autores principales: Harter, Philipp, Hauke, Jan, Heitz, Florian, Reuss, Alexander, Kommoss, Stefan, Marmé, Frederik, Heimbach, André, Prieske, Katharina, Richters, Lisa, Burges, Alexander, Neidhardt, Guido, de Gregorio, Nikolaus, El-Balat, Ahmed, Hilpert, Felix, Meier, Werner, Kimmig, Rainer, Kast, Karin, Sehouli, Jalid, Baumann, Klaus, Jackisch, Christian, Park-Simon, Tjoung-Won, Hanker, Lars, Kröber, Sandra, Pfisterer, Jacobus, Gevensleben, Heidrun, Schnelzer, Andreas, Dietrich, Dimo, Neunhöffer, Tanja, Krockenberger, Mathias, Brucker, Sara Y., Nürnberg, Peter, Thiele, Holger, Altmüller, Janine, Lamla, Josefin, Elser, Gabriele, du Bois, Andreas, Hahnen, Eric, Schmutzler, Rita
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5650145/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29053726
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186043
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author Harter, Philipp
Hauke, Jan
Heitz, Florian
Reuss, Alexander
Kommoss, Stefan
Marmé, Frederik
Heimbach, André
Prieske, Katharina
Richters, Lisa
Burges, Alexander
Neidhardt, Guido
de Gregorio, Nikolaus
El-Balat, Ahmed
Hilpert, Felix
Meier, Werner
Kimmig, Rainer
Kast, Karin
Sehouli, Jalid
Baumann, Klaus
Jackisch, Christian
Park-Simon, Tjoung-Won
Hanker, Lars
Kröber, Sandra
Pfisterer, Jacobus
Gevensleben, Heidrun
Schnelzer, Andreas
Dietrich, Dimo
Neunhöffer, Tanja
Krockenberger, Mathias
Brucker, Sara Y.
Nürnberg, Peter
Thiele, Holger
Altmüller, Janine
Lamla, Josefin
Elser, Gabriele
du Bois, Andreas
Hahnen, Eric
Schmutzler, Rita
author_facet Harter, Philipp
Hauke, Jan
Heitz, Florian
Reuss, Alexander
Kommoss, Stefan
Marmé, Frederik
Heimbach, André
Prieske, Katharina
Richters, Lisa
Burges, Alexander
Neidhardt, Guido
de Gregorio, Nikolaus
El-Balat, Ahmed
Hilpert, Felix
Meier, Werner
Kimmig, Rainer
Kast, Karin
Sehouli, Jalid
Baumann, Klaus
Jackisch, Christian
Park-Simon, Tjoung-Won
Hanker, Lars
Kröber, Sandra
Pfisterer, Jacobus
Gevensleben, Heidrun
Schnelzer, Andreas
Dietrich, Dimo
Neunhöffer, Tanja
Krockenberger, Mathias
Brucker, Sara Y.
Nürnberg, Peter
Thiele, Holger
Altmüller, Janine
Lamla, Josefin
Elser, Gabriele
du Bois, Andreas
Hahnen, Eric
Schmutzler, Rita
author_sort Harter, Philipp
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Identification of families at risk for ovarian cancer offers the opportunity to consider prophylactic surgery thus reducing ovarian cancer mortality. So far, identification of potentially affected families in Germany was solely performed via family history and numbers of affected family members with breast or ovarian cancer. However, neither the prevalence of deleterious variants in BRCA1/2 in ovarian cancer in Germany nor the reliability of family history as trigger for genetic counselling has ever been evaluated. METHODS: Prospective counseling and germline testing of consecutive patients with primary diagnosis or with platinum-sensitive relapse of an invasive epithelial ovarian cancer. Testing included 25 candidate and established risk genes. Among these 25 genes, 16 genes (ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, CDH1, CHEK2, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, NBN, PMS2, PTEN, PALB2, RAD51C, RAD51D, STK11, TP53) were defined as established cancer risk genes. A positive family history was defined as at least one relative with breast cancer or ovarian cancer or breast cancer in personal history. RESULTS: In total, we analyzed 523 patients: 281 patients with primary diagnosis of ovarian cancer and 242 patients with relapsed disease. Median age at primary diagnosis was 58 years (range 16–93) and 406 patients (77.6%) had a high-grade serous ovarian cancer. In total, 27.9% of the patients showed at least one deleterious variant in all 25 investigated genes and 26.4% in the defined 16 risk genes. Deleterious variants were most prevalent in the BRCA1 (15.5%), BRCA2 (5.5%), RAD51C (2.5%) and PALB2 (1.1%) genes. The prevalence of deleterious variants did not differ significantly between patients at primary diagnosis and relapse. The prevalence of deleterious variants in BRCA1/2 (and in all 16 risk genes) in patients <60 years was 30.2% (33.2%) versus 10.6% (18.9%) in patients ≥60 years. Family history was positive in 43% of all patients. Patients with a positive family history had a prevalence of deleterious variants of 31.6% (36.0%) versus 11.4% (17.6%) and histologic subtype of high grade serous ovarian cancer versus other showed a prevalence of deleterious variants of 23.2% (29.1%) and 10.2% (14.8%), respectively. Testing only for BRCA1/2 would miss in our series more than 5% of the patients with a deleterious variant in established risk genes. CONCLUSIONS: 26.4% of all patients harbor at least one deleterious variant in established risk genes. The threshold of 10% mutation rate which is accepted for reimbursement by health care providers in Germany was observed in all subgroups analyzed and neither age at primary diagnosis nor histo-type or family history sufficiently enough could identify a subgroup not eligible for genetic counselling and testing. Genetic testing should therefore be offered to every patient with invasive epithelial ovarian cancer and limiting testing to BRCA1/2 seems to be not sufficient.
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spelling pubmed-56501452017-11-03 Prevalence of deleterious germline variants in risk genes including BRCA1/2 in consecutive ovarian cancer patients (AGO-TR-1) Harter, Philipp Hauke, Jan Heitz, Florian Reuss, Alexander Kommoss, Stefan Marmé, Frederik Heimbach, André Prieske, Katharina Richters, Lisa Burges, Alexander Neidhardt, Guido de Gregorio, Nikolaus El-Balat, Ahmed Hilpert, Felix Meier, Werner Kimmig, Rainer Kast, Karin Sehouli, Jalid Baumann, Klaus Jackisch, Christian Park-Simon, Tjoung-Won Hanker, Lars Kröber, Sandra Pfisterer, Jacobus Gevensleben, Heidrun Schnelzer, Andreas Dietrich, Dimo Neunhöffer, Tanja Krockenberger, Mathias Brucker, Sara Y. Nürnberg, Peter Thiele, Holger Altmüller, Janine Lamla, Josefin Elser, Gabriele du Bois, Andreas Hahnen, Eric Schmutzler, Rita PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Identification of families at risk for ovarian cancer offers the opportunity to consider prophylactic surgery thus reducing ovarian cancer mortality. So far, identification of potentially affected families in Germany was solely performed via family history and numbers of affected family members with breast or ovarian cancer. However, neither the prevalence of deleterious variants in BRCA1/2 in ovarian cancer in Germany nor the reliability of family history as trigger for genetic counselling has ever been evaluated. METHODS: Prospective counseling and germline testing of consecutive patients with primary diagnosis or with platinum-sensitive relapse of an invasive epithelial ovarian cancer. Testing included 25 candidate and established risk genes. Among these 25 genes, 16 genes (ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, CDH1, CHEK2, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, NBN, PMS2, PTEN, PALB2, RAD51C, RAD51D, STK11, TP53) were defined as established cancer risk genes. A positive family history was defined as at least one relative with breast cancer or ovarian cancer or breast cancer in personal history. RESULTS: In total, we analyzed 523 patients: 281 patients with primary diagnosis of ovarian cancer and 242 patients with relapsed disease. Median age at primary diagnosis was 58 years (range 16–93) and 406 patients (77.6%) had a high-grade serous ovarian cancer. In total, 27.9% of the patients showed at least one deleterious variant in all 25 investigated genes and 26.4% in the defined 16 risk genes. Deleterious variants were most prevalent in the BRCA1 (15.5%), BRCA2 (5.5%), RAD51C (2.5%) and PALB2 (1.1%) genes. The prevalence of deleterious variants did not differ significantly between patients at primary diagnosis and relapse. The prevalence of deleterious variants in BRCA1/2 (and in all 16 risk genes) in patients <60 years was 30.2% (33.2%) versus 10.6% (18.9%) in patients ≥60 years. Family history was positive in 43% of all patients. Patients with a positive family history had a prevalence of deleterious variants of 31.6% (36.0%) versus 11.4% (17.6%) and histologic subtype of high grade serous ovarian cancer versus other showed a prevalence of deleterious variants of 23.2% (29.1%) and 10.2% (14.8%), respectively. Testing only for BRCA1/2 would miss in our series more than 5% of the patients with a deleterious variant in established risk genes. CONCLUSIONS: 26.4% of all patients harbor at least one deleterious variant in established risk genes. The threshold of 10% mutation rate which is accepted for reimbursement by health care providers in Germany was observed in all subgroups analyzed and neither age at primary diagnosis nor histo-type or family history sufficiently enough could identify a subgroup not eligible for genetic counselling and testing. Genetic testing should therefore be offered to every patient with invasive epithelial ovarian cancer and limiting testing to BRCA1/2 seems to be not sufficient. Public Library of Science 2017-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC5650145/ /pubmed/29053726 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186043 Text en © 2017 Harter et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Harter, Philipp
Hauke, Jan
Heitz, Florian
Reuss, Alexander
Kommoss, Stefan
Marmé, Frederik
Heimbach, André
Prieske, Katharina
Richters, Lisa
Burges, Alexander
Neidhardt, Guido
de Gregorio, Nikolaus
El-Balat, Ahmed
Hilpert, Felix
Meier, Werner
Kimmig, Rainer
Kast, Karin
Sehouli, Jalid
Baumann, Klaus
Jackisch, Christian
Park-Simon, Tjoung-Won
Hanker, Lars
Kröber, Sandra
Pfisterer, Jacobus
Gevensleben, Heidrun
Schnelzer, Andreas
Dietrich, Dimo
Neunhöffer, Tanja
Krockenberger, Mathias
Brucker, Sara Y.
Nürnberg, Peter
Thiele, Holger
Altmüller, Janine
Lamla, Josefin
Elser, Gabriele
du Bois, Andreas
Hahnen, Eric
Schmutzler, Rita
Prevalence of deleterious germline variants in risk genes including BRCA1/2 in consecutive ovarian cancer patients (AGO-TR-1)
title Prevalence of deleterious germline variants in risk genes including BRCA1/2 in consecutive ovarian cancer patients (AGO-TR-1)
title_full Prevalence of deleterious germline variants in risk genes including BRCA1/2 in consecutive ovarian cancer patients (AGO-TR-1)
title_fullStr Prevalence of deleterious germline variants in risk genes including BRCA1/2 in consecutive ovarian cancer patients (AGO-TR-1)
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of deleterious germline variants in risk genes including BRCA1/2 in consecutive ovarian cancer patients (AGO-TR-1)
title_short Prevalence of deleterious germline variants in risk genes including BRCA1/2 in consecutive ovarian cancer patients (AGO-TR-1)
title_sort prevalence of deleterious germline variants in risk genes including brca1/2 in consecutive ovarian cancer patients (ago-tr-1)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5650145/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29053726
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186043
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