1. Association of Inherited Pathogenic Variants in Checkpoint Kinase 2 (CHEK2) With Susceptibility to Testicular Germ Cell Tumors
- Author
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Mislav Grgić, Bradley Wubbenhorst, Anis A. Hamid, Marija Gamulin, Jennifer T. Loud, Stefanie Meien, Louise C. Pyle, Amaro Taylor-Weiner, Tomislav Kuliš, Christopher Sweeney, David J. Vaughn, Saud H. AlDubayan, Sarah C. Markt, Linda A. Jacobs, Christian Kubisch, Daniel J. Rader, Brendan Reardon, Scott M. Damrauer, Katherine L. Nathanson, Rama Godse, Peter A. Kanetsky, Nathanael D. Moore, Mark H. Greene, Douglas R. Stewart, Zeljko Kastelan, Rachel L. Kember, Davor Lessel, and Eliezer M. Van Allen
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Oncology ,endocrine system ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,cancer-susceptibility ,i157t variant ,phosphorylation ,metaanalysis ,contribute ,activation ,mutations ,protein ,loci ,gene ,Germline ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Testicular Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Allele ,Exome ,CHEK2 ,Germ-Line Mutation ,Original Investigation ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Odds ratio ,Neoplasms, Germ Cell and Embryonal ,medicine.disease ,Checkpoint Kinase 2 ,Case-Control Studies ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cohort ,Sample collection ,business - Abstract
IMPORTANCE Approximately 50% of the risk for the development of testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs) is estimated to be heritable, but no mendelian TGCT predisposition genes have yet been identified. It is hypothesized that inherited pathogenic DNA repair gene (DRG) alterations may drive susceptibility to TGCTs. OBJECTIVE To systematically evaluate the enrichment of germline pathogenic variants in the mendelian cancer predisposition DRGs in patients with TGCTs vs healthy controls. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A case-control enrichment analysis was performed from January 2016 to May 2018 to screen for 48 DRGs in 205 unselected men with TGCT and 27 173 ancestry-matched cancer-free individuals from the Exome Aggregation Consortium cohort in the discovery stage. Significant findings were selectively replicated in independent cohorts of 448 unselected men with TGCTs and 442 population-matched controls, as well as 231 high-risk men with TGCTs and 3090 ancestry- matched controls. Statistical analysis took place from January to May 2018. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Gene-level enrichment analysis of germline pathogenic variants in individuals with TGCTs relative to cancer-free controls. RESULTS Among 205 unselected men with TGCTs (mean [SD] age, 33.04 [9.67] years), 22 pathogenic germline DRG variants, one-third of which were in CHEK2 (OMIM 604373), were identified in 20 men (9.8% ; 95% CI, 6.1%-14.7%). Unselected men with TGCTs were approximately 4 times more likely to carry germline loss-of-function CHEK2 variants compared with cancer-free individuals from the Exome Aggregation Consortium cohort (odds ratio [OR], 3.87 ; 95% CI, 1.65-8.86 ; nominal P = .006 ; q = 0.018). Similar enrichment was also seen in an independent cohort of 448 unselected Croatian men with TGCTs (mean [SD] age, 31.98 [8.11] years) vs 442 unselected Croatian men without TGCTs (at least 50 years of age at time of sample collection) (OR, >1.4 ; P = .03) and 231 high-risk men with TGCTs (mean [SD] age, 31.54 [9.24] years) vs 3090 men (all older than 50 years) from the Penn Medicine Biobank (OR, 6.30 ; 95% CI, 2.34- 17.31 ; P = .001). The low-penetrance CHEK2 variant (p.Ile157Thr) was found to be a Croatian founder TGCT risk variant (OR, 3.93 ; 95% CI, 1.53-9.95 ; P = .002). Individuals with the pathogenic CHEK2 loss-of-function variants developed TGCTs 6 years earlier than individuals with CHEK2 wild-type alleles (5.95 years ; 95% CI, 1.48-10.42 ; P = .009). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE This multicenter case-control analysis of men with or without TGCTs provides evidence for CHEK2 as a novel moderate-penetrance TGCT susceptibility gene, with potential clinical utility. In addition to highlighting DNA-repair deficiency as a potential mechanism driving TGCT susceptibility, this analysis also provides new avenues to explore management strategies and biological investigations for high-risk individuals.
- Published
- 2019
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