4.5 Article

Does multilocus inherited neoplasia alleles syndrome have severe clinical expression?

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS
Volume 56, Issue 8, Pages 521-525

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2018-105700

Keywords

multilocus inherited neoplasia alleles syndrome; genetic testing; cancer syndromes; gene panel

Funding

  1. Carlos III National Health Institute
  2. Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia - FEDER funds-a way to build Europe [PI16/00563, PI16/01363, SAF2015-68016-R]
  3. Government of Catalonia (Pla estrategic de recerca i innovacio en salut (PERIS)) [2017SGR1282, 2017SGR496]
  4. scientific foundation Asociacion Espanola Contra el Cancer
  5. Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia - FEDER funds-a way to build Europe (CIBERONC)

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Importance Genetic testing of hereditary cancer using comprehensive gene panels can identify patients with more than one pathogenic mutation in high and/or moderate-risk-associated cancer genes. This phenomenon is known as multilocus inherited neoplasia alleles syndrome (MINAS), which has been potentially linked to more severe clinical manifestations. Objective To determine the prevalence and clinical features of MINAS in a large cohort of adult patients with hereditary cancer homogeneously tested with the same gene panel. Patients and methods A cohort of 1023 unrelated patients with suspicion of hereditary cancer was screened using a validated panel including up to 135 genes associated with hereditary cancer and phakomatoses. Results Thirteen (1.37%) patients harbouring two pathogenic mutations in dominant cancer-predisposing genes were identified, representing 5.7% (13/226) of patients with pathogenic mutations. Most (10/13) of these cases presented clinical manifestations associated with only one of the mutations identified. One case showed mutations in MEN1 and MLH1 and developed tumours associated with both cancer syndromes. Interestingly, three of the double mutants had a young age of onset or severe breast cancer phenotype and carried mutations in moderate to low-risk DNA damage repair-associated genes; two of them presented biallelic inactivation of CHEK2. We included these two patients for the sake of their clinical interest although we are aware that they do not exactly fulfil the definition of MINAS since both mutations are in the same gene. Conclusions and relevance Genetic analysis of a broad cancer gene panel identified the largest series of patients with MINAS described in a single study. Overall, our data do not support the existence of more severe manifestations in double mutants at the time of diagnosis although they do confirm previous evidence of severe phenotype in biallelic CHEK2 and other DNA repair cancer-predisposing genes.

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