4.5 Article

Integrated case-control and somatic-germline interaction analyses of soft-tissue sarcoma

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS
Volume 58, Issue 3, Pages 145-153

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2019-106814

Keywords

clinical genetics; epidemiology; genetics; molecular genetics

Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health [R01 CA195614, R01 GM104390, R01 HG005859]
  2. US National Cancer Institutes Cancer Center Support Grant [P30CA016672]

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The study revealed strong genome-wide signals for NF1 in multiple STS subtypes, as well as significant association signals for TP53, RB1, and MSH2. Additionally, BAG1 showed a strong genome-wide signal after NF1, suggesting it as a novel candidate high-risk gene for STS.
Purpose The contribution of rare genetic variation in the development of soft-tissue sarcoma (STS) remains underexplored. To address this gap, we conducted a whole-exome case-control and somatic-germline interaction study to identify and characterise STS susceptible genes. Methods The study involved 219 STS cases from The Cancer Genome Atlas and 3507 controls. All cases and controls were matched genetically onEuropean ancestry based on the 1000 Genomes project. Cross-platform technological stratification was performed with XPAT and gene-based association tests with VAAST 2. Results NF1 exhibited the strongest genome-wide signal across the six subtypes, with p=1x10(-5). We also observed nominally significant association signals for three additional genes of interest, TP53 (p=0.0025), RB1 (p=0.0281), and MSH2 (p=0.0085). BAG1, which has not previously been implicated in STS, exhibited the strongest genome-wide signal after NF1, with p=6x10(-5). The association signals for NF1 and MSH2 were driven primarily by truncating variants, with ORs of 39 (95% CI: 7.1 to 220) for NF1 and 33 (95% CI: 2.4 to 460) for MSH2. In contrast, the association signals for RB1 and BAG1 were driven primarily by predicted damaging missense variants, with estimated ORs of 12 (95% CI: 2.4 to 59) for RB1 and 20 (95% CI: 1.4 to 300) for BAG1. Conclusions Our results confirm that pathogenic variants in NF1, RB1 and TP53 confer large increases in the risk of developing multiple STS subtypes, provide support for the role of MSH2 in STS susceptibility and identify BAG1 as a novel candidate STS risk gene.

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