4.6 Article

Implementation of Multigene Germline and Parallel Somatic Genetic Testing in Epithelial Ovarian Cancer: SIGNPOST Study

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13174344

Keywords

ovarian cancer; BRCA; genetic testing; germline; somatic; RAD51C; RAD51D; BRIP1

Categories

Funding

  1. Barts Charity [ECMG1B6R]

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Multigene testing in ovarian cancer, especially after counselling by multidisciplinary clinical teams, shows a high uptake rate of 97% and identifies a significant proportion of patients with pathogenic variants such as BRCA1/BRCA2, RAD51C/RAD51D/BRIP1. Prospective parallel somatic and germline panel testing is recommended to maximize variant identification in cancer patients.
Simple Summary Multigene testing in ovarian cancer has received increased support due to its' applicability for cancer treatment and the impact it has on cancer prevention in families. This study shows that multi-gene germline and somatic testing uptake after counselling by a member of the multidisciplinary cancer clinical team in women with ovarian cancer, was high (97%). A total of 15.5% of women were identified to have germline BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variants and 7.8% had somatic BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variants. A total of 2.3% patients had RAD51C/RAD51D/BRIP1 pathogenic variants. We found that 11% of germline pathogenic variants were large-genomic-rearrangements and were missed by somatic testing. Our findings support prospective parallel somatic-&-germline panel testing to maximize variant identification. We present findings of a cancer multidisciplinary-team (MDT) coordinated mainstreaming pathway of unselected 5-panel germline BRCA1/BRCA2/RAD51C/RAD51D/BRIP1 and parallel somatic BRCA1/BRCA2 testing in all women with epithelial-OC and highlight the discordance between germline and somatic testing strategies across two cancer centres. Patients were counselled and consented by a cancer MDT member. The uptake of parallel multi-gene germline and somatic testing was 97.7%. Counselling by clinical-nurse-specialist more frequently needed >1 consultation (53.6% (30/56)) compared to a medical (15.0% (21/137)) or surgical oncologist (15.3% (17/110)) (p < 0.001). The median age was 54 (IQR = 51-62) years in germline pathogenic-variant (PV) versus 61 (IQR = 51-71) in BRCA wild-type (p = 0.001). There was no significant difference in distribution of PVs by ethnicity, stage, surgery timing or resection status. A total of 15.5% germline and 7.8% somatic BRCA1/BRCA2 PVs were identified. A total of 2.3% patients had RAD51C/RAD51D/BRIP1 PVs. A total of 11% germline PVs were large-genomic-rearrangements and missed by somatic testing. A total of 20% germline PVs are missed by somatic first BRCA-testing approach and 55.6% germline PVs missed by family history ascertainment. The somatic testing failure rate is higher (23%) for patients undergoing diagnostic biopsies. Our findings favour a prospective parallel somatic and germline panel testing approach as a clinically efficient strategy to maximise variant identification. UK Genomics test-directory criteria should be expanded to include a panel of OC genes.

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