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CDH1 germline mutations in healthy individuals from families with the hereditary diffuse gastric cancer syndrome

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS
Volume 59, Issue 4, Pages 313-317

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2021-108226

Keywords

gastroenterology

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health with Ricerca Corrente 5x1000 funds
  2. Fondazione IEO-CCM

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This study aimed to determine the frequency of different pathogenic CDH1 germline mutations in healthy and asymptomatic individuals from families with HDGC syndrome. The results showed that splicing and missense mutations in CDH1 were more commonly found in healthy individuals compared to those with gastric cancer in families meeting HDGC criteria. This suggests that not all pathogenic CDH1 germline mutations confer the same risk of developing gastric cancer.
The objective of this study was to determining the frequency of different sub-types of pathogenic CDH1 germline mutations in healthy and asymptomatic individuals from families with the hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC) syndrome. Relevant literature dating from 1998 to 2019 was systematically searched for data on CDH1 germline mutations. The collected variants were classified according to their subtype into the following classes: missense, non-sense, splicing, insertions and deletions. The chi(2) test was used to estimate if the difference observed between patients with gastric cancer (GC) and unaffected individuals was statistically significant. CDH1 genetic screening data were retrieved for 224 patients with GC and 289 healthy individuals. Among the subjects that had tested CDH1 positive, splicing mutations were found in 30.4% of the healthy individuals and in 15.2% of the patients with GC (p=0.0076). Missense mutations were also found to occur in healthy subjects with higher frequency (22.2%) than in GC-affected individuals (18.3%), but the difference was not significant in this case. In families meeting the clinical criteria for the HDGC syndrome, CDH1 splicing and missense germline mutations have been reported to occur with higher frequency in healthy subjects than in patients with cancer. This preliminary observation suggests that not all pathogenic CDH1 germline mutations confer the same risk of developing GC.

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