Frequency of Pathogenic Germline Variants in Cancer-Susceptibility Genes in Patients With Osteosarcoma

Lisa Mirabello(National Institutes of Health), Bin Zhu(National Institutes of Health), Roelof Koster(National Institutes of Health), Eric Karlins(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Michael Dean(National Institutes of Health), Meredith Yeager(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Matthew Gianferante(National Institutes of Health), Logan G. Spector(University of Minnesota), Lindsay M. Morton(National Institutes of Health), Danielle M. Karyadi(National Institutes of Health), Leslie L. Robison(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Gregory T. Armstrong(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Smita Bhatia(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Lei Song(National Institutes of Health), Nathan Pankratz(University of Minnesota), Maísa Pinheiro(National Institutes of Health), Julie M. Gastier‐Foster(Nationwide Children's Hospital), Richard Görlick(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Sílvia Regina Caminada de Toledo(Support group for adolescents and children with cancer), Antônio Sérgio Petrilli(Support group for adolescents and children with cancer), Ana Patiño‐García(Navarre Institute of Health Research), Fernando Lecanda(Navarre Institute of Health Research), Miriam Gutiérrez-Jimeno, Massimo Serra(Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli), Claudia Maria Hattinger(Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli), Piero Picci(Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli), Katia Scotlandi(Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli), Adrienne M. Flanagan(Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Trust), Roberto Tirabosco(Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Trust), Maria Fernanda Amary(Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Trust), Nilgün Kurucu, İlhan İnci, Mandy L. Ballinger(Garvan Institute of Medical Research), David M. Thomas(Garvan Institute of Medical Research), Donald A. Barkauskas(University of Southern California), Gerardo Mejia-Baltodano(Hospital Infantil Manuel de Jesús Rivera), Patricia Valverde, Belynda Hicks(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Bin Zhu(National Institutes of Health), Mingyi Wang(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Amy Hutchinson(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Margaret A. Tucker(National Institutes of Health), Joshua N. Sampson(National Institutes of Health), Maria Teresa Landi(National Institutes of Health), Neal D. Freedman(National Institutes of Health), Susan M. Gapstur(American Cancer Society), Brian S. Carter(American Cancer Society), Robert N. Hoover(National Institutes of Health), Stephen J. Chanock(National Institutes of Health), Sharon A. Savage(National Institutes of Health)
JAMA Oncology
March 19, 2020
Cited by 247Open Access
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Abstract

Importance: Osteosarcoma, the most common malignant bone tumor in children and adolescents, occurs in a high number of cancer predisposition syndromes that are defined by highly penetrant germline mutations. The germline genetic susceptibility to osteosarcoma outside of familial cancer syndromes remains unclear. Objective: To investigate the germline genetic architecture of 1244 patients with osteosarcoma. Design, Setting, and Participants: Whole-exome sequencing (n = 1104) or targeted sequencing (n = 140) of the DNA of 1244 patients with osteosarcoma from 10 participating international centers or studies was conducted from April 21, 2014, to September 1, 2017. The results were compared with the DNA of 1062 individuals without cancer assembled internally from 4 participating studies who underwent comparable whole-exome sequencing and 27 173 individuals of non-Finnish European ancestry who were identified through the Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC) database. In the analysis, 238 high-interest cancer-susceptibility genes were assessed followed by testing of the mutational burden across 736 additional candidate genes. Principal component analyses were used to identify 732 European patients with osteosarcoma and 994 European individuals without cancer, with outliers removed for patient-control group comparisons. Patients were subsequently compared with individuals in the ExAC group. All data were analyzed from June 1, 2017, to July 1, 2019. Main Outcomes and Measures: The frequency of rare pathogenic or likely pathogenic genetic variants. Results: Among 1244 patients with osteosarcoma (mean [SD] age at diagnosis, 16 [8.9] years [range, 2-80 years]; 684 patients [55.0%] were male), an analysis restricted to individuals with European ancestry indicated a significantly higher pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant burden in 238 high-interest cancer-susceptibility genes among patients with osteosarcoma compared with the control group (732 vs 994, respectively; P = 1.3 × 10-18). A pathogenic or likely pathogenic cancer-susceptibility gene variant was identified in 281 of 1004 patients with osteosarcoma (28.0%), of which nearly three-quarters had a variant that mapped to an autosomal-dominant gene or a known osteosarcoma-associated cancer predisposition syndrome gene. The frequency of a pathogenic or likely pathogenic cancer-susceptibility gene variant was 128 of 1062 individuals (12.1%) in the control group and 2527 of 27 173 individuals (9.3%) in the ExAC group. A higher than expected frequency of pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants was observed in genes not previously linked to osteosarcoma (eg, CDKN2A, MEN1, VHL, POT1, APC, MSH2, and ATRX) and in the Li-Fraumeni syndrome-associated gene, TP53. Conclusions and Relevance: In this study, approximately one-fourth of patients with osteosarcoma unselected for family history had a highly penetrant germline mutation requiring additional follow-up analysis and possible genetic counseling with cascade testing.


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