Invitae Corporation, San Francisco, California.
Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana.
JAMA Oncol. 2019 Apr 1;5(4):523-528. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2018.6760.
Prostate cancer is the third leading cause of cancer-related death in men in the United States. Although serious, most of these diagnoses are not terminal. Inherited risk for prostate cancer is associated with aggressive disease and poorer outcomes, indicating a critical need for increased genetic screening to identify disease-causing variants that can pinpoint individuals at increased risk for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.
To identify positive (pathogenic, likely pathogenic, and increased risk) germline variants in a large prostate cancer cohort and to evaluate the usefulness of current practice guidelines in recognizing individuals at increased risk for prostate cancer who would benefit from diagnostic genetic testing.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Cross-sectional study of data from 3607 men with a personal history of prostate cancer who underwent germline genetic testing between 2013 and 2018 and were unselected for family history, stage of disease, or age at diagnosis. Referral-based testing was performed at a Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments/College of American Pathologists-certified diagnostic laboratory. All analysis took place between February 2017 and August 2018.
The frequency and distribution of positive germline variants, and the percentage of individuals with prostate cancer who met National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines for germline genetic testing.
Of 3607 men (mean [SD] age at testing, 67 [9.51] years; mean age at diagnosis, 60 [9.05] years) with a personal diagnosis of prostate cancer who were referred for genetic testing, 620 (17.2%) had positive germline variants, of which only 30.7% were variants in BRCA1/2. Positive variants in HOXB13, a gene associated only with prostate cancer risk, were identified in 30 patients (4.5%). DNA mismatch repair variants with substantial known therapeutic implications were detected in 1.74% of variants in the total population tested. Examination of self-reported family histories indicated that 229 individuals (37%) with positive variants in this cohort would not have been approved for genetic testing using the NCCN genetic/familial breast and ovarian guidelines for patients with prostate cancer.
Current NCCN guidelines and Gleason scores cannot reliably stratify patients with prostate cancer for the presence or absence of pathogenic germline variants. Most positive genetic test results identified in this study have important management implications for patients and their families, which underscores the need to revisit current guidelines.
前列腺癌是美国男性癌症相关死亡的第三大主要原因。尽管情况严重,但大多数此类诊断并非绝症。前列腺癌的遗传风险与侵袭性疾病和较差的预后相关,这表明迫切需要增加基因筛查,以识别导致疾病的变异,从而确定患有转移性去势抵抗性前列腺癌风险增加的个体。
在一个大型前列腺癌队列中确定阳性(致病性、可能致病性和增加风险)种系变体,并评估当前实践指南在识别患有前列腺癌且可能受益于诊断性遗传检测的个体方面的有用性,这些个体具有增加的风险。
设计、地点和参与者:这是一项横断面研究,分析了 2013 年至 2018 年间接受种系基因检测且无家族史、疾病分期或诊断时年龄选择的 3607 名有前列腺癌个人病史的男性的数据。基于转诊的检测在经临床实验室改进修正案/美国病理学家学院认证的诊断实验室进行。所有分析均在 2017 年 2 月至 2018 年 8 月之间进行。
阳性种系变体的频率和分布,以及符合国家综合癌症网络(NCCN)种系基因检测指南的前列腺癌患者的百分比。
在被转诊进行基因检测的 3607 名(平均[标准差]检测时年龄,67[9.51]岁;平均诊断时年龄,60[9.05]岁)有前列腺癌个人诊断的男性中,有 620 名(17.2%)有阳性种系变体,其中只有 30.7%为 BRCA1/2 变体。在 30 名患者(4.5%)中发现了仅与前列腺癌风险相关的 HOXB13 基因的阳性变体。在测试的总人群中,检测到具有明显已知治疗意义的 DNA 错配修复变体的比例为 1.74%。对自我报告的家族史的检查表明,在该队列中,229 名(37%)有阳性变体的个体如果使用 NCCN 前列腺癌患者的遗传/家族性乳腺癌和卵巢指南,将不会被批准进行基因检测。
目前的 NCCN 指南和 Gleason 评分不能可靠地区分患有前列腺癌的患者是否存在致病性种系变体。本研究中确定的大多数阳性基因检测结果对患者及其家属的管理具有重要意义,这突显出需要重新审视当前的指南。