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A comprehensive analysis of germline predisposition to early-onset ovarian cancer.

Authors :
Horackova, Klara
Zemankova, Petra
Nehasil, Petr
Vocka, Michal
Hovhannisyan, Milena
Matejkova, Katerina
Janatova, Marketa
Cerna, Marta
Kleiblova, Petra
Jelinkova, Sandra
Stastna, Barbora
Just, Pavel
Dolezalova, Tatana
Nemcova, Barbora
Urbanova, Marketa
Koudova, Monika
Hazova, Jana
Machackova, Eva
Foretova, Lenka
Stranecky, Viktor
Source :
Scientific Reports. 7/13/2024, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p1-12. 12p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The subset of ovarian cancer (OC) diagnosed ≤ 30yo represents a distinct subgroup exhibiting disparities from late-onset OC in many aspects, including indefinite germline cancer predisposition. We performed DNA/RNA-WES with HLA-typing, PRS assessment and survival analysis in 123 early-onset OC-patients compared to histology/stage-matched late-onset and unselected OC-patients, and population-matched controls. Only 6/123(4.9%) early-onset OC-patients carried a germline pathogenic variant (GPV) in high-penetrance OC-predisposition genes. Nevertheless, our comprehensive germline analysis of early-onset OC-patients revealed two divergent trajectories of potential germline susceptibility. Firstly, overrepresentation analysis highlighted a connection to breast cancer (BC) that was supported by the CHEK2 GPV enrichment in early-onset OC(p = 1.2 × 10–4), and the presumably BC-specific PRS313, which successfully stratified early-onset OC-patients from controls(p = 0.03). The second avenue pointed towards the impaired immune response, indicated by LY75-CD302 GPV(p = 8.3 × 10–4) and diminished HLA diversity compared with controls(p = 3 × 10–7). Furthermore, we found a significantly higher overall GPV burden in early-onset OC-patients compared to controls(p = 3.8 × 10–4). The genetic predisposition to early-onset OC appears to be a heterogeneous and complex process that goes beyond the traditional Mendelian monogenic understanding of hereditary cancer predisposition, with a significant role of the immune system. We speculate that rather a cumulative overall GPV burden than specific GPV may potentially increase OC risk, concomitantly with reduced HLA diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178416790
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-66324-2