Mandelker Diana, Zhang Liying, Kemel Yelena, Stadler Zsofia K, Joseph Vijai, Zehir Ahmet, Pradhan Nisha, Arnold Angela, Walsh Michael F, Li Yirong, Balakrishnan Anoop R, Syed Aijazuddin, Prasad Meera, Nafa Khedoudja, Carlo Maria I, Cadoo Karen A, Sheehan Meg, Fleischut Megan H, Salo-Mullen Erin, Trottier Magan, Lipkin Steven M, Lincoln Anne, Mukherjee Semanti, Ravichandran Vignesh, Cambria Roy, Galle Jesse, Abida Wassim, Arcila Marcia E, Benayed Ryma, Shah Ronak, Yu Kenneth, Bajorin Dean F, Coleman Jonathan A, Leach Steven D, Lowery Maeve A, Garcia-Aguilar Julio, Kantoff Philip W, Sawyers Charles L, Dickler Maura N, Saltz Leonard, Motzer Robert J, O'Reilly Eileen M, Scher Howard I, Baselga Jose, Klimstra David S, Solit David B, Hyman David M, Berger Michael F, Ladanyi Marc, Robson Mark E, Offit Kenneth
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York.
Sloan Kettering Institute, New York, New York.
JAMA. 2017 Sep 5;318(9):825-835. doi: 10.1001/jama.2017.11137.
Guidelines for cancer genetic testing based on family history may miss clinically actionable genetic changes with established implications for cancer screening or prevention.
To determine the proportion and potential clinical implications of inherited variants detected using simultaneous sequencing of the tumor and normal tissue ("tumor-normal sequencing") compared with genetic test results based on current guidelines.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: From January 2014 until May 2016 at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, 10 336 patients consented to tumor DNA sequencing. Since May 2015, 1040 of these patients with advanced cancer were referred by their oncologists for germline analysis of 76 cancer predisposition genes. Patients with clinically actionable inherited mutations whose genetic test results would not have been predicted by published decision rules were identified. Follow-up for potential clinical implications of mutation detection was through May 2017.
Tumor and germline sequencing compared with the predicted yield of targeted germline sequencing based on clinical guidelines.
Proportion of clinically actionable germline mutations detected by universal tumor-normal sequencing that would not have been detected by guideline-directed testing.
Of 1040 patients, the median age was 58 years (interquartile range, 50.5-66 years), 65.3% were male, and 81.3% had stage IV disease at the time of genomic analysis, with prostate, renal, pancreatic, breast, and colon cancer as the most common diagnoses. Of the 1040 patients, 182 (17.5%; 95% CI, 15.3%-19.9%) had clinically actionable mutations conferring cancer susceptibility, including 149 with moderate- to high-penetrance mutations; 101 patients tested (9.7%; 95% CI, 8.1%-11.7%) would not have had these mutations detected using clinical guidelines, including 65 with moderate- to high-penetrance mutations. Frequency of inherited mutations was related to case mix, stage, and founder mutations. Germline findings led to discussion or initiation of change to targeted therapy in 38 patients tested (3.7%) and predictive testing in the families of 13 individuals (1.3%), including 6 for whom genetic evaluation would not have been initiated by guideline-based testing.
In this referral population with selected advanced cancers, universal sequencing of a broad panel of cancer-related genes in paired germline and tumor DNA samples was associated with increased detection of individuals with potentially clinically significant heritable mutations over the predicted yield of targeted germline testing based on current clinical guidelines. Knowledge of these additional mutations can help guide therapeutic and preventive interventions, but whether all of these interventions would improve outcomes for patients with cancer or their family members requires further study.
clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01775072.
基于家族史的癌症基因检测指南可能会遗漏对癌症筛查或预防具有既定意义的临床可操作基因改变。
确定与基于当前指南的基因检测结果相比,通过肿瘤和正常组织同时测序(“肿瘤-正常测序”)检测到的遗传变异的比例及潜在临床意义。
设计、背景和参与者:2014年1月至2016年5月在纪念斯隆凯特琳癌症中心,10336名患者同意进行肿瘤DNA测序。自2015年5月起,这些晚期癌症患者中的1040名被肿瘤学家转介进行76个癌症易感基因的种系分析。识别出那些基因检测结果无法通过已发表的决策规则预测的具有临床可操作遗传突变的患者。对突变检测潜在临床意义的随访至2017年5月。
肿瘤和种系测序与基于临床指南的靶向种系测序预测产量的比较。
通过通用肿瘤-正常测序检测到的临床可操作种系突变中,指南指导检测无法检测到的比例。
1040名患者中,年龄中位数为58岁(四分位间距,50.5 - 66岁),65.3%为男性,81.3%在基因组分析时处于IV期疾病,最常见的诊断为前列腺癌、肾癌、胰腺癌、乳腺癌和结肠癌。在1040名患者中,182名(17.5%;95%CI,15.3% - 19.9%)具有赋予癌症易感性的临床可操作突变,包括149名具有中度至高度外显率突变的患者;101名接受检测的患者(9.7%;95%CI,8.1% - 11.7%)使用临床指南不会检测到这些突变,包括65名具有中度至高度外显率突变的患者。遗传突变频率与病例组合、分期和奠基者突变有关。种系检测结果导致38名接受检测的患者(3.7%)讨论或开始改变靶向治疗,并导致13名个体(1.3%)的家族进行预测性检测,其中6名个体基于指南检测不会启动基因评估。
在这个选定的晚期癌症转诊人群中,对配对的种系和肿瘤DNA样本进行广泛癌症相关基因的通用测序与基于当前临床指南的靶向种系检测预测产量相比,增加了对具有潜在临床显著遗传突变个体的检测。了解这些额外的突变有助于指导治疗和预防干预,但所有这些干预是否会改善癌症患者或其家庭成员的结局需要进一步研究。
clinicaltrials.gov标识符:NCT01775072。