Authors' Affiliations: Department of Dermatology, Medical Statistics and Clinical Epidemiology, Clinical Genetics, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden; Medical Affairs, Agendia, Amsterdam; Department of Pathology, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam; The Netherlands Foundation for the Detection of Hereditary Tumors, Leiden; and Department of Gastroenterology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands.
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2013 Oct;22(10):1771-7. doi: 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-13-0130. Epub 2013 Jul 29.
Lifetime melanoma risk of mutation carriers from families with a germline mutation in the CDKN2A gene is estimated to be 67%. The necessity to include family members in a melanoma surveillance program is widely endorsed, but there is no consensus on which family members should be invited.
In a retrospective follow-up study, we investigated the yield of surveillance of first- and second-degree relatives of melanoma and pancreatic cancer patients from 21 families with the "p16-Leiden" CDKN2A mutation. Melanoma incidence rates were compared with the general population.
Three-hundred and fifty-four first-degree relatives and 391 second-degree relatives were included. Forty-five first-degree relatives and 11 second-degree relatives were diagnosed with melanoma. Most (72%) of second-degree relatives diagnosed with melanoma had become a first-degree relative before diagnosis, due to the occurrence of a melanoma in a parent or sibling. Overall, melanoma incidence rate was 2.1 per 1,000 person years [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.2-3.8] in family members still being second-degree relatives at diagnosis, compared with 9.9 per 1,000 person years (95% CI, 7.4-13.3) in first-degree relatives. The standardized morbidity ratio for melanoma of second-degree relatives compared with the general population was 12.9 (95% CI, 7.2-23.4).
Second-degree relatives from families with the p16-Leiden mutation in CDKN2A have a considerably increased melanoma risk compared with the general population.
This study provides justification for the surveillance of second-degree relatives from families with a CDKN2A germline mutation.
携带 CDKN2A 基因种系突变的家族中,突变携带者的终身黑色素瘤风险估计为 67%。广泛支持将家庭成员纳入黑色素瘤监测计划,但对于应该邀请哪些家庭成员存在共识。
在一项回顾性随访研究中,我们调查了 21 个携带“p16-Leiden”CDKN2A 突变的黑色素瘤和胰腺癌患者的一级和二级亲属的监测结果。将黑色素瘤发病率与普通人群进行比较。
共纳入 354 名一级亲属和 391 名二级亲属。45 名一级亲属和 11 名二级亲属被诊断为黑色素瘤。大多数(72%)被诊断为黑色素瘤的二级亲属在诊断前已经成为一级亲属,因为父母或兄弟姐妹中发生了黑色素瘤。总体而言,在诊断时仍为二级亲属的家庭成员中,黑色素瘤发病率为每 1000 人年 2.1 例(95%置信区间,1.2-3.8),而一级亲属为每 1000 人年 9.9 例(95%置信区间,7.4-13.3)。与普通人群相比,二级亲属的黑色素瘤标准化发病比为 12.9(95%置信区间,7.2-23.4)。
与普通人群相比,携带 CDKN2A 基因 p16-Leiden 突变的家族中的二级亲属黑色素瘤风险显著增加。
本研究为监测携带 CDKN2A 种系突变的家族中的二级亲属提供了依据。