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Identification of TP53 germline variants in pediatric patients undergoing tumor testing: strategy and prevalence.

Authors :
Luo, Minjie
Wong, Derek
Zelley, Kristin
Wu, Jinhua
Schubert, Jeffery
Denenberg, Elizabeth H
Fanning, Elizabeth A
Chen, Jiani
Gallo, Daniel
Golenberg, Netta
Patel, Maha
Conlin, Laura K
Maxwell, Kara N
Wertheim, Gerald B
Surrey, Lea F
Zhong, Yiming
Brodeur, Garrett M
MacFarland, Suzanne P
Li, Marilyn M
Source :
JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute; Aug2024, Vol. 116 Issue 8, p1356-1365, 10p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background TP53 alterations are common in certain pediatric cancers, making identification of putative germline variants through tumor genomic profiling crucial for disease management. Methods We analyzed TP53 alterations in 3123 tumors from 2788 pediatric patients sequenced using tumor-only or tumor-normal paired panels. Germline confirmatory testing was performed when indicated. Somatic and germline variants were classified based on published guidelines. Results In 248 tumors from 222 patients, 284 tier 1/2 TP53 sequence and small copy number variants were detected. Following germline classification, 86.6% of 142 unique variants were pathogenic or likely pathogenic. Confirmatory testing on 118 patients revealed germline TP53 variants in 28 of them (23 pathogenic or likely pathogenic and 5 of uncertain significance), suggesting a minimum Li-Fraumeni syndrome incidence of 0.8% (23/2788) in this cohort, 10.4% (23/222) in patients with TP53 variant–carrying tumors, and 19.5% (23/118) with available normal samples. About 25% (7/28) of patients with germline TP53 variants did not meet Li-Fraumeni syndrome diagnostic or testing criteria, while 20.9% (28/134) with confirmed or inferred somatic origins did. TP53 biallelic inactivation occurred in 75% of germline carrier tumors and was also prevalent in other groups, causing an elevated tumor-observed variant allelic fraction. Somatic evidence, however, including low variant allele fraction correctly identified only 27.8% (25/90) of patients with confirmed somatic TP53 variants. Conclusion The high incidence and variable phenotype of Li-Fraumeni syndrome in this cohort highlights the importance of assessing germline status of TP53 variants identified in all pediatric tumors. Without clear somatic evidence, distinguishing somatic from germline origins is challenging. Classifying germline and somatic variants should follow appropriate guidelines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00278874
Volume :
116
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178974650
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djae102