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Prospective pan-cancer germline testing using MSK-IMPACT informs clinical translation in 751 patients with pediatric solid tumors

Authors :
Yasmin Khakoo
Maria I. Carlo
Elise Fiala
Ozge Ceyhan-Birsoy
Leonard H. Wexler
Nancy Bouvier
Diana Mandelker
Jasmine H. Francis
Alicia Latham
Sowmya Jairam
Marc Ladanyi
Gowtham Jayakumaran
Sameer Farouk Sait
Filemon S. Dela Cruz
Ira J. Dunkel
Michael Walsh
Michael F. Berger
Todd E. Heaton
Ellen M. Basu
Matthias A. Karajannis
Ciyu Yang
Christopher J. Forlenza
Neerav Shukla
Emily K. Slotkin
Julia Glade Bender
Tanya M. Trippett
Nai-Kong Cheung
Danielle Novetsky Friedman
Justin T. Gerstle
Semanti Murkherjee
Ahmet Zehir
Zsofia K. Stadler
Erin E. Salo-Mullen
Maria Luisa Sulis
Yelena Kemel
Karen Cadoo
Sabine Topka
Jennifer Kennedy
Megan Harlan Fleischut
Nikolaus Schultz
Richard J. O'Reilly
Anna Maio
Margaret Sheehan
Shakeel Modak
Michael V. Ortiz
Alex Kentsis
Andrew L. Kung
Paul A. Meyers
Stephen S. Roberts
Kenneth Offit
Angela G. Arnold
Mark E. Robson
David H. Abramson
Stephen Gilheeney
Liying Zhang
Audrey Mauguen
Joseph Vijai
Source :
Nat Cancer, Nature cancer, vol 2, iss 3
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The spectrum of germline predisposition in pediatric cancer continues to be realized. Here we report 751 solid tumor patients who underwent prospective matched tumor-normal DNA sequencing and downstream clinical use (clinicaltrials.gov NCT01775072). Germline pathogenic and likely pathogenic (P/LP) variants were reported. One or more P/LP variants were found in 18% (138/751) of individuals when including variants in low, moderate, and high penetrance dominant or recessive genes, or 13% (99/751) in moderate and high penetrance dominant genes. 34% of high or moderate penetrance variants were unexpected based on the patient's diagnosis and previous history. 76% of patients with positive results completed a clinical genetics visit, and 21% had at least one relative undergo cascade testing as a result of this testing. Clinical actionability additionally included screening, risk reduction in relatives, reproductive use, and use of targeted therapies. Germline testing should be considered for all children with cancer.

Details

ISSN :
26621347
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....450b67a842a84fb60b1c81f5f10dc8ea