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Clinically relevant germline variants in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients

Authors :
Atte K. Lahtinen
Jessica Koski
Jarmo Ritari
Kati Hyvärinen
Satu Koskela
Jukka Partanen
Kim Vettenranta
Minna Koskenvuo
Riitta Niittyvuopio
Urpu Salmenniemi
Maija Itälä-Remes
Kirsi Jahnukainen
Outi Kilpivaara
Ulla Wartiovaara-Kautto
Research Programs Unit
University of Helsinki
Statskunskap med förvaltning
ATG - Applied Tumor Genomics
Medicum
Department of Medical and Clinical Genetics
Helsinki University Hospital Area
Clinicum
Children's Hospital
Lastentautien yksikkö
HUS Children and Adolescents
HUS Comprehensive Cancer Center
Hematologian yksikkö
HUSLAB
HUS Diagnostic Center
Source :
Bone Marrow Transplantation. 58:39-45
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) provides patients with severe hematologic disease a well-established potential for curation. Incorporation of germline analyses in the workup of HSCT patients is not a common practice. Recognizing rare harmful germline variants may however affect patients’ pre-transplantation care, choice of the stem cell donor, and complication risks. We analyzed a population-based series of germline exome data of 432 patients who had undergone HSCT. Our aim was to identify clinically relevant variants that may challenge the outcome of the HSCT. We focused on genes predisposing to hematological diseases, or solid tumors, and genes included in the American College of Medical Genetics secondary findings list v3.0. As population-specific controls, we used GnomAD non-cancer Finns (n = 10,816). We identified in our population-based analysis rare harmful germline variants in disease-predisposing or actionable toxicity-increasing genes in 17.8% of adult and pediatric patients that have undergone HSCT (15.1% and 22.9%, respectively). More than half of the patients with a family member as a donor had not received genetic diagnosis prior to the HSCT. Our results encourage clinicians to incorporate germline genetic testing in the HSCT protocol in the future in order to reach optimal long-term outcome for the patients.

Details

ISSN :
14765365 and 02683369
Volume :
58
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bone Marrow Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1ef27f4096723a5a50ba40dfba241963