Survival Benefit for Individuals With Constitutional Mismatch Repair Deficiency Undergoing Surveillance

Carol Durno(Mount Sinai Hospital), Ayse B. Ercan(University of Toronto), Vanessa Bianchi(Hospital for Sick Children), Melissa Edwards(Hospital for Sick Children), Melyssa Aronson(Mount Sinai Hospital), Melissa A. Galati(University of Toronto), Eshetu G. Atenafu(University of Toronto), Gadi Abebe‐Campino(Sheba Medical Center), Abeer Al-Battashi(Ministry of Health), Musa Alharbi(King Fahd Medical City), Vahid Fallah Azad(Mahak Hospital and Rehabilitation Complex), Hagit Baris(Rambam Health Care Campus), Donald Basel(Medical College of Wisconsin), Raymond Bedgood(Navicent Health), Anne Bendel(Children's Minnesota), Shay Ben‐Shachar(Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center), Deborah T. Blumenthal(Tel Aviv University), Maude L. Blundell(Sutter Health), Miriam Bornhorst(Children's National), Annika Bronsema(Universität Hamburg), Elizabeth Cairney(London Health Sciences Centre), Sara Rhode(Cleveland Clinic), Shani Caspi(Sheba Medical Center), Aghiad Chamdin(Michigan State University), Stefano Chiaravalli(Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori), Shlomi Constantini(Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center), Bruce Crooks(Izaak Walton Killam Health Centre), Anirban Das(Hospital for Sick Children), Rina Dvir(Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center), Roula Farah(University Medical Center Rizk Hospital), William D. Foulkes(McGill University Health Centre), Z Frenkel(Sheba Medical Center), Bailey Gallinger(Hospital for Sick Children), Sharon L. Gardner(NYU Langone Health), David Gass(Atrium Medical Cente), Mithra Ghalibafian(Mahak Hospital and Rehabilitation Complex), Catherine Gilpin(Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario), Yael Goldberg(Hadassah Medical Center), Catherine Goudie(McGill University Health Centre), Syed Ahmer Hamid(Indus Hospital), Heather Hampel(The Ohio State University), Jordan R. Hansford(Royal Children's Hospital), Craig Harlos(Hospital for Sick Children), Nobuko Hijiya(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Saunders Hsu(Sutter Health), Junne Kamihara(Hospital for Sick Children), Rejin Kebudi(Hospital for Sick Children), Jeffrey Knipstein(Medical College of Wisconsin), Carl Koschmann(University of Michigan), Christian P. Kratz(Goethe University Frankfurt), Valérie Larouche(Hospital for Sick Children), Álvaro Lassaletta(Hospital for Sick Children), Scott Lindhorst(Medical University of South Carolina), Simon C. Ling(Hospital for Sick Children), Michael P. Link(Hospital for Sick Children), Rebecca Loret De Mola(Oregon Health & Science University), Rebecca C. Luiten(Hospital for Sick Children), Michal Lurye(Sheba Medical Center), Jamie L. Maciaszek(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Vanan MagimairajanIssai(Hospital for Sick Children), Ossama Maher(Hospital for Sick Children), Maura Massimino(Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori), Rose B. McGee(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Naureen Mushtaq(Hospital for Sick Children), Gary Mason(Hospital for Sick Children), Monica Newmark(Lurie Children's Hospital), Garth Nicholas(University of Ottawa), Kim E. Nichols(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Theodore Nicolaides(NYU Langone Health), Enrico Opocher(University of Padua), Michael Osborn(Women's and Children's Hospital), Benjamin Oshrine(Johns Hopkins University), Rachel Pearlman(Hospital for Sick Children), Daniel Pettee(Hospital for Sick Children), Jan Rapp(West Virginia University), Mohsin Rashid(Izaak Walton Killam Health Centre), Alyssa Reddy(University of California, San Francisco), Lara Reichman(Hospital for Sick Children), Marc Remke(Hospital for Sick Children), Gabriel Robbins(NYU Langone Health), Sumita Roy(Wayne State University), Magnus Sabel(Hospital for Sick Children), David Samuel(Hospital for Sick Children), Isabelle Scheers(Hospital for Sick Children), Kami Wolfe Schneider(Hospital for Sick Children), Santanu Sen(Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital), Duncan Stearns(Hospital for Sick Children), David Sumerauer(Charles University), Carol J. Swallow(Mount Sinai Hospital), Leslie M. Taylor(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Gregory A. Thomas(Oregon Health & Science University), Helen Toledano(Schneider Children's Medical Center), Patrick Tomboc(West Virginia University), An Van Damme(UCLouvain), Ira Winer(Wayne State University), Michal Yalon(Sheba Medical Center), Yi‐Yen Lee(Taipei Veterans General Hospital), Michal Zápotocký(University Hospital in Motol), Shayna Zelcer(London Health Sciences Centre), David S. Ziegler(Sydney Children's Hospital), Stefanie Zimmermann(Medizinische Hochschule Hannover), Cynthia Hawkins(Hospital for Sick Children), David Malkin(Hospital for Sick Children), Éric Bouffet(Hospital for Sick Children), Anita Villani(Hospital for Sick Children), Uri Tabori(Hospital for Sick Children)
Journal of Clinical Oncology
May 4, 2021
Cited by 99Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE Constitutional mismatch repair deficiency syndrome (CMMRD) is a lethal cancer predisposition syndrome characterized by early-onset synchronous and metachronous multiorgan tumors. We designed a surveillance protocol for early tumor detection in these individuals. PATIENTS AND METHODS Data were collected from patients with confirmed CMMRD who were registered in the International Replication Repair Deficiency Consortium. Tumor spectrum, efficacy of the surveillance protocol, and malignant transformation of low-grade lesions were examined for the entire cohort. Survival outcomes were analyzed for patients followed prospectively from the time of surveillance implementation. RESULTS A total of 193 malignant tumors in 110 patients were identified. Median age of first cancer diagnosis was 9.2 years (range: 1.7-39.5 years). For patients undergoing surveillance, all GI and other solid tumors, and 75% of brain cancers were detected asymptomatically. By contrast, only 16% of hematologic malignancies were detected asymptomatically ( P < .001). Eighty-nine patients were followed prospectively and used for survival analysis. Five-year overall survival (OS) was 90% (95% CI, 78.6 to 100) and 50% (95% CI, 39.2 to 63.7) when cancer was detected asymptomatically and symptomatically, respectively ( P = .001). Patient outcome measured by adherence to the surveillance protocol revealed 4-year OS of 79% (95% CI, 54.8 to 90.9) for patients undergoing full surveillance, 55% (95% CI, 28.5 to 74.5) for partial surveillance, and 15% (95% CI, 5.2 to 28.8) for those not under surveillance ( P < .0001). Of the 64 low-grade tumors detected, the cumulative likelihood of transformation from low-to high-grade was 81% for GI cancers within 8 years and 100% for gliomas in 6 years. CONCLUSION Surveillance and early cancer detection are associated with improved OS for individuals with CMMRD.


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