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Whole-Exome Sequencing Study of Familial Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma and Its Implication for Identifying High-Risk Individuals

Authors :
Tong-Min Wang
Yong-Qiao He
Wen-Qiong Xue
Jiang-Bo Zhang
Yun-Fei Xia
Chang-Mi Deng
Wen-Li Zhang
Ruo-Wen Xiao
Ying Liao
Da-Wei Yang
Ting Zhou
Dan-Hua Li
Lu-Ting Luo
Xia-Ting Tong
Yan-Xia Wu
Xue-Yin Chen
Xi-Zhao Li
Pei-Fen Zhang
Xiao-Hui Zheng
Shao-Dan Zhang
Ye-Zhu Hu
Fang Wang
Zi-Yi Wu
Mei-Qi Zheng
Jing-Wen Huang
Yi-Jing Jia
Lei-Lei Yuan
Rui You
Guan-Qun Zhou
Li-Xia Lu
Yu-Ying Liu
Ming-Yuan Chen
Lin Feng
Wei Dai
Ze-Fang Ren
Hai-Qiang Mai
Ying Sun
Jun Ma
Wei Zheng
Maria Li Lung
Wei-Hua Jia
Source :
Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 114(12)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is closely associated with genetic factors and Epstein-Barr virus infection, showing strong familial aggregation. Individuals with a family history suffer elevated NPC risk, requiring effective genetic counseling for risk stratification and individualized prevention. Methods We performed whole-exome sequencing on 502 familial NPC patients and 404 unaffected relatives and controls. We systematically evaluated the established cancer predisposition genes and investigated novel NPC susceptibility genes, making comparisons with 21 other familial cancers in the UK biobank (N = 5218). Results Rare pathogenic mutations in the established cancer predisposition genes were observed in familial NPC patients, including ERCC2 (1.39%), TP63 (1.00%), MUTYH (0.80%), and BRCA1 (0.80%). Additionally, 6 novel susceptibility genes were identified. RAD54L, involved in the DNA repair pathway together with ERCC2, MUTYH, and BRCA1, showed the highest frequency (4.18%) in familial NPC. Enrichment analysis found mutations in TP63 were enriched in familial NPC, and RAD54L and EML2 were enriched in both NPC and other Epstein-Barr virus–associated cancers. Besides rare variants, common variants reported in the studies of sporadic NPC were also associated with familial NPC risk. Individuals in the top quantile of common variant-derived genetic risk score while carrying rare variants exhibited increased NPC risk (odds ratio = 13.47, 95% confidence interval = 6.33 to 28.68, P = 1.48 × 10–11); men in this risk group showed a cumulative lifetime risk of 24.19%, much higher than those in the bottom common variant-derived genetic risk score quantile and without rare variants (2.04%). Conclusions This study expands the catalog of NPC susceptibility genes and provides the potential for risk stratification of individuals with an NPC family history.

Subjects

Subjects :
Cancer Research
Oncology

Details

ISSN :
14602105
Volume :
114
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c4dc20b6ee9d050c406dab61b6981ad9