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Constitutional Microsatellite Instability, Genotype, and Phenotype Correlations in Constitutional Mismatch Repair Deficiency.

Authors :
Gallon R
Phelps R
Hayes C
Brugieres L
Guerrini-Rousseau L
Colas C
Muleris M
Ryan NAJ
Evans DG
Grice H
Jessop E
Kunzemann-Martinez A
Marshall L
Schamschula E
Oberhuber K
Azizi AA
Baris Feldman H
Beilken A
Brauer N
Brozou T
Dahan K
Demirsoy U
Florkin B
Foulkes W
Januszkiewicz-Lewandowska D
Jones KJ
Kratz CP
Lobitz S
Meade J
Nathrath M
Pander HJ
Perne C
Ragab I
Ripperger T
Rosenbaum T
Rueda D
Sarosiek T
Sehested A
Spier I
Suerink M
Zimmermann SY
Zschocke J
Borthwick GM
Wimmer K
Burn J
Jackson MS
Santibanez-Koref M
Source :
Gastroenterology [Gastroenterology] 2023 Apr; Vol. 164 (4), pp. 579-592.e8. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Dec 29.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background & Aims: Constitutional mismatch repair deficiency (CMMRD) is a rare recessive childhood cancer predisposition syndrome caused by germline mismatch repair variants. Constitutional microsatellite instability (cMSI) is a CMMRD diagnostic hallmark and may associate with cancer risk. We quantified cMSI in a large CMMRD patient cohort to explore genotype-phenotype correlations using novel MSI markers selected for instability in blood.<br />Methods: Three CMMRD, 1 Lynch syndrome, and 2 control blood samples were genome sequenced to >120× depth. A pilot cohort of 8 CMMRD and 38 control blood samples and a blinded cohort of 56 CMMRD, 8 suspected CMMRD, 40 Lynch syndrome, and 43 control blood samples were amplicon sequenced to 5000× depth. Sample cMSI score was calculated using a published method comparing microsatellite reference allele frequencies with 80 controls.<br />Results: Thirty-two mononucleotide repeats were selected from blood genome and pilot amplicon sequencing data. cMSI scoring using these MSI markers achieved 100% sensitivity (95% CI, 93.6%-100.0%) and specificity (95% CI 97.9%-100.0%), was reproducible, and was superior to an established tumor MSI marker panel. Lower cMSI scores were found in patients with CMMRD with MSH6 deficiency and patients with at least 1 mismatch repair missense variant, and patients with biallelic truncating/copy number variants had higher scores. cMSI score did not correlate with age at first tumor.<br />Conclusions: We present an inexpensive and scalable cMSI assay that enhances CMMRD detection relative to existing methods. cMSI score is associated with mismatch repair genotype but not phenotype, suggesting it is not a useful predictor of cancer risk.<br /> (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1528-0012
Volume :
164
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Gastroenterology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36586540
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2022.12.017