Screening for germline mutations in breast/ovarian cancer susceptibility genes in high-risk families in Israel. - PubMed - NCBI
Screening for germline mutations in breast/ovarian cancer susceptibility genes in high-risk families in Israel.
Yablonski-Peretz T1,
Paluch-Shimon S2,
Gutman LS3,
Kaplan Y3,
Dvir A3,
Barnes-Kedar I4,
Kadouri L1,
Semenisty V5,
Efrat N6,
Neiman V7,
Glasser Y3,
Michaelson-Cohen R8,
Katz L9,
Kaufman B2,
Golan T2,
Reish O10,11,
Hubert A1,
Safra T12,
Yaron Y13,11,
Friedman E14,15.
Abstract
We evaluated the clinical utility of screening for mutations in 34 breast/ovarian cancer susceptibility genes in high-risk families in Israel. Participants were recruited from 12, 2012 to 6, 2015 from 8 medical centers. All participants had high breast/ovarian cancer risk based on personal and family history. Genotyping was performed with the InVitae™ platform. The study was approved by the ethics committees of the participating centers; all participants gave a written informed consent before entering the study. Overall, 282 individuals participated in the study: 149 (53 %) of Ashkenazi descent, 80 (28 %) Jewish non-Ashkenazi descent, 22 (8 %) of mixed Ashkenazi/non-Ashkenazi origin, 21 (7 %) were non-Jewish Caucasians, and the remaining patients (n = 10-3.5 %) were of Christian Arabs/Druze/unknown ethnicity. For breast cancer patients (n = 165), the median (range) age at diagnosis was 46 (22-90) years and for ovarian cancer (n = 15) 54 (38-69) years. Overall, 30 cases (10.6 %) were found to carry a pathogenic actionable mutation in the tested genes: 10 BRCA1 (3 non-founder mutations), 9 BRCA2 (8 non-founder mutations), and one each in the RAD51C and CHEK2 genes. Furthermore, actionable mutations were detected in 9 more cases in 4 additional genes (MSH2, RET, MSH6, and APC). No pathogenic mutations were detected in the other genotyped genes. In this high-risk population, 10.6 % harbored an actionable pathogenic mutation, including non-founder mutations in BRCA1/2 and in additional cancer susceptibility genes, suggesting that high-risk families should be genotyped and be assigned a genotype-based cancer risk. KEYWORDS:
Cancer susceptibility genes; Germline mutations; High-risk families; Multigene genotyping
- PMID:
- 26687385
- [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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