High Yield of Pathogenic Germline Mutations Causative or Likely Causative of the Cancer Phenotype in Selected Children with Cancer

Publication date

2018-04-01

Authors

Diets, Illja J.
Waanders, EsmeORCID 0000-0002-2466-953X
Ligtenberg, Marjolijn J.
van Bladel, Diede A.G.
Kamping, Eveline J.
Hoogerbrugge, Peter
Hopman, Saskia M J
Olderode-Berends, Maran J.
Gerkes, Erica H.
Koolen, David A.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

License

Abstract

Purpose: In many children with cancer and characteristics suggestive of a genetic predisposition syndrome, the genetic cause is still unknown. We studied the yield of pathogenic mutations by applying whole-exome sequencing on a selected cohort of children with cancer. Experimental Design: To identify mutations in known and novel cancer-predisposing genes, we performed trio-based whole-exome sequencing on germline DNA of 40 selected children and their parents. These children were diagnosed with cancer and had at least one of the following features: (1) intellectual disability and/or congenital anomalies, (2) multiple malignancies, (3) family history of cancer, or (4) an adult type of cancer. We first analyzed the sequence data for germline mutations in 146 known cancer-predisposing genes. If no causative mutation was found, the analysis was extended to Results: Four patients carried causative mutations in a known cancer-predisposing gene: TP53 and DICER1 (n ¼ 3). In another 4 patients, exome sequencing revealed mutations causing syndromes that might have contributed to the malignancy (EP300-based Rubinstein–Taybi syndrome, ARID1A-based Coffin–Siris syndrome, ACTB-based Baraitser–Winter syndrome, and EZH2-based Weaver syndrome). In addition, we identified two genes, KDM3B and TYK2, which are possibly involved in genetic cancer predisposition. Conclusions: In our selected cohort of patients, pathogenic germline mutations causative or likely causative of the cancer phenotype were found in 8 patients, and two possible novel cancer-predisposing genes were identified. Therewith, our study shows the added value of sequencing beyond a cancer gene panel in selected patients, to recognize childhood cancer predisposition.

Keywords

Oncology, Cancer Research

Citation

Diets, I J, Waanders, E, Ligtenberg, M J, van Bladel, D A G, Kamping, E J, Hoogerbrugge, P M, Hopman, S, Olderode-Berends, M J, Gerkes, E H, Koolen, D A, Marcelis, C, Santen, G W, van Belzen, M J, Mordaunt, D, McGregor, L, Thompson, E, Kattamis, A, Pastorczak, A, Mlynarski, W, Ilencikova, D, Vulto-Van Silfhout, A, Gardeitchik, T, de Bont, E S, Loeffen, J, Wagner, A, Mensenkamp, A R, Kuiper, R P, Hoogerbrugge, N & Jongmans, M C 2018, 'High Yield of Pathogenic Germline Mutations Causative or Likely Causative of the Cancer Phenotype in Selected Children with Cancer', Clinical Cancer Research, vol. 24, no. 7, pp. 1594-1603. https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-17-1725, https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-17-1725