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Incidence of mosaicism in 1055 de novo NF2 cases: much higher than previous estimates with high utility of next-generation sequencing

Authors :
Omar N. Pathmanaban
Miriam J. Smith
Simon R. Freeman
Raji Anup
Mary Perry
D. Gareth Evans
Elaine F. Harkness
Emma Stapleton
Roger Laitt
Simon Tobi
Allyson Parry
Rupert Obholzer
Andrew T. King
Naomi L. Bowers
Philip T Smith
Shazia K. Afridi
Mark Kellett
Owen M. Thomas
Chris Duff
Grace Vassallo
Juliette Gair
Andrew J Wallace
Simon K W Lloyd
Scott A. Rutherford
Claire Hartley
Charlotte Hammerbeck-Ward
Stavros Stivaros
Patrick R. Axon
Dorothy Halliday
Source :
English Specialist NF research group 2019, ' Incidence of mosaicism in 1055 de novo NF2 cases: Much higher than previous estimates with high utility of Next Generation Sequencing. ', Genetics in Medicine . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41436-019-0598-7
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate the incidence of mosaicism in de novo neurofibromatosis 2 (NF2).METHODS: Patients fulfilling NF2 criteria, but with no known affected family member from a previous generation (n = 1055), were tested for NF2 variants in lymphocyte DNA and where available tumor DNA. The proportion of individuals with a proven or presumed mosaic NF2 variant was assessed and allele frequencies of identified variants evaluated using next-generation sequencing.RESULTS: The rate of proven/presumed mosaicism was 232/1055 (22.0%). However, nonmosaic heterozygous pathogenic variants were only identified in 387/1055 (36.7%). When variant detection rates in second generation nonmosaics were applied to de novo cases, we assessed the overall probable mosaicism rate to be 59.7%. This rate differed by age from 21.7% in those presenting with bilateral vestibular schwannoma CONCLUSION: This study has identified a very high probable mosaicism rate in de novo NF2, probably making NF2 the condition with the highest expressed rate of mosaicism in de novo dominant disease that is nonlethal in heterozygote form. Risks to offspring are small and probably correlate with variant allele frequency detected in blood.

Details

ISSN :
10983600
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genetics in Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bf947c2aee5b8ac14ebd0ccad711d6ea