Features associated with germline CDKN2A mutations: a GenoMEL study of melanoma-prone families from three continents

Alisa M Goldstein(United States Department of Health and Human Services), May Chan(Cancer Research UK), Mark Harland(Cancer Research UK), Nicholas K. Hayward(QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute), Florence Démenais(Inserm), D. Timothy Bishop(Cancer Research UK), Esther Azizi(Tel Aviv University), Wilma Bergman(Leiden University Medical Center), Giovanna Bianchi‐Scarrà(University of Genoa), William Bruno(University of Genoa), Donato Calista(Ospedale “M. Bufalini” di Cesena), Lisa Cannon‐Albright(University of Utah), Valérie Chaudru(Inserm), Agnès Chompret(Institut Gustave Roussy), Francisco Cuellar(Hospital Clínic de Barcelona), David E Elder(University of Pennsylvania), Paola Ghiorzo(University of Genoa), Elizabeth M. Gillanders(National Institutes of Health), Nelleke A. Gruis(Leiden University Medical Center), Johan Hansson(Karolinska University Hospital), David Hogg(University of Toronto), Elizabeth A Holland(The University of Sydney), Peter A. Kanetsky(University of Pennsylvania), Richard Kefford(The University of Sydney), M.T. Landi(United States Department of Health and Human Services), Julie Lang(University of Glasgow), Sancy A. Leachman(University of Utah), R.M. MacKie(University of Glasgow), Veronica Magnusson(Karolinska University Hospital), Graham J. Mann(The University of Sydney), Julia Newton‐Bishop(Cancer Research UK), Jane M. Palmer(QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute), Susana Puig(Hospital Clínic de Barcelona), Joan A. Puig‐Butille(Hospital Clínic de Barcelona), Mitchell Stark(QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute), Hensin Tsao(Massachusetts General Hospital), M. A. Tucker(United States Department of Health and Human Services), Linda Whitaker(Cancer Research UK), Emanuel Yakobson(Tel Aviv University)
Journal of Medical Genetics
August 11, 2006
Cited by 472Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The major factors individually reported to be associated with an increased frequency of CDKN2A mutations are increased number of patients with melanoma in a family, early age at melanoma diagnosis, and family members with multiple primary melanomas (MPM) or pancreatic cancer. METHODS: These four features were examined in 385 families with > or =3 patients with melanoma pooled by 17 GenoMEL groups, and these attributes were compared across continents. RESULTS: Overall, 39% of families had CDKN2A mutations ranging from 20% (32/162) in Australia to 45% (29/65) in North America to 57% (89/157) in Europe. All four features in each group, except pancreatic cancer in Australia (p = 0.38), individually showed significant associations with CDKN2A mutations, but the effects varied widely across continents. Multivariate examination also showed different predictors of mutation risk across continents. In Australian families, > or =2 patients with MPM, median age at melanoma diagnosis < or =40 years and > or =6 patients with melanoma in a family jointly predicted the mutation risk. In European families, all four factors concurrently predicted the risk, but with less stringent criteria than in Australia. In North American families, only > or =1 patient with MPM and age at diagnosis < or =40 years simultaneously predicted the mutation risk. CONCLUSIONS: The variation in CDKN2A mutations for the four features across continents is consistent with the lower melanoma incidence rates in Europe and higher rates of sporadic melanoma in Australia. The lack of a pancreatic cancer-CDKN2A mutation relationship in Australia probably reflects the divergent spectrum of mutations in families from Australia versus those from North America and Europe. GenoMEL is exploring candidate host, genetic and/or environmental risk factors to better understand the variation observed.


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