Frey Melissa K, Pothuri Bhavana
Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Weill Cornell Medicine, 525 East 68th Street, Suite J-130, New York, NY 10065 USA.
Division of Gynecologic Oncology, New York University Langone Medical Center, 240 E. 38th St, 19th floor, New York, NY 10016 USA.
Gynecol Oncol Res Pract. 2017 Feb 22;4:4. doi: 10.1186/s40661-017-0039-8. eCollection 2017.
Until recently our knowledge of a genetic contribution to ovarian cancer focused almost exclusively on mutations in the genes. However, through germline and tumor sequencing an understanding of the larger phenomenon of homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) has emerged. HRD impairs normal DNA damage repair which results in loss or duplication of chromosomal regions, termed genomic loss of heterozygosity (LOH). The list of inherited mutations associated with ovarian cancer continues to grow with the literature currently suggesting that up to one in four cases will have germline mutations, the majority of which result in HRD. Furthermore, an additional 5-7% of ovarian cancer cases will have somatic HRD. In the near future, patients with germline or somatic HRD will likely be candidates for a growing list of targeted therapies in addition to poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors, and, as a result, establishing an infrastructure for widespread HRD testing is imperative. The objective of this review article is to focus on the current germline and somatic contributors to ovarian cancer and the state of both germline and somatic HRD testing. For now, germline and somatic tumor testing provide important and non-overlapping clinical information. We will explore a proposed testing strategy using somatic tumor testing as an initial triage whereby those patients found with somatic testing to have HRD gene mutations are referred to genetics to determine if the mutation is germline. This strategy allows for rapid access to genomic information that can guide targeted treatment decisions and reduce the burden on genetic counselors, an often limited resource, who will only see patients with a positive somatic triage test.
直到最近,我们对卵巢癌遗传因素的了解几乎完全集中在基因的突变上。然而,通过种系和肿瘤测序,对同源重组缺陷(HRD)这一更大现象的认识已经出现。HRD会损害正常的DNA损伤修复,从而导致染色体区域的丢失或重复,即基因组杂合性缺失(LOH)。与卵巢癌相关的遗传性突变列表不断增加,目前的文献表明,多达四分之一的病例会有生殖系突变,其中大多数会导致HRD。此外,另有5%-7%的卵巢癌病例会有体细胞HRD。在不久的将来,除了聚(ADP-核糖)聚合酶(PARP)抑制剂外,生殖系或体细胞HRD患者可能会成为越来越多靶向治疗的候选对象,因此,建立广泛的HRD检测基础设施势在必行。这篇综述文章的目的是关注目前卵巢癌的生殖系和体细胞因素以及生殖系和体细胞HRD检测的现状。目前,生殖系和体细胞肿瘤检测提供重要且不重叠的临床信息。我们将探讨一种提议的检测策略,即使用体细胞肿瘤检测作为初步筛选,通过体细胞检测发现有HRD基因突变的患者会被转介到遗传学部门,以确定该突变是否为生殖系突变。这种策略能够快速获取可指导靶向治疗决策的基因组信息,并减轻遗传咨询师(这往往是一种有限的资源)的负担,他们只会接待体细胞筛选检测呈阳性的患者。