Cancers (Sep 2021)

Prevalence of Germline Pathogenic Variants in Cancer Predisposing Genes in Czech and Belgian Pancreatic Cancer Patients

  • Greet Wieme,
  • Jan Kral,
  • Toon Rosseel,
  • Petra Zemankova,
  • Bram Parton,
  • Michal Vocka,
  • Mattias Van Heetvelde,
  • Petra Kleiblova,
  • Bettina Blaumeiser,
  • Jana Soukupova,
  • Jenneke van den Ende,
  • Petr Nehasil,
  • Sabine Tejpar,
  • Marianna Borecka,
  • Encarna B. Gómez García,
  • Marinus J. Blok,
  • Marketa Safarikova,
  • Marta Kalousova,
  • Karen Geboes,
  • Robin De Putter,
  • Bruce Poppe,
  • Kim De Leeneer,
  • Zdenek Kleibl,
  • Marketa Janatova,
  • Kathleen B. M. Claes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13174430
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 17
p. 4430

Abstract

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(1) Background: The proportion and spectrum of germline pathogenic variants (PV) associated with an increased risk for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) varies among populations. (2) Methods: We analyzed 72 Belgian and 226 Czech PDAC patients by multigene panel testing. The prevalence of pathogenic variants (PV) in relation to personal/family cancer history were evaluated. PDAC risks were calculated using both gnomAD-NFE and population-matched controls. (3) Results: In 35/298 (11.7%) patients a PV in an established PDAC-predisposition gene was found. BRCA1/2 PV conferred a high risk in both populations, ATM and Lynch genes only in the Belgian subgroup. PV in other known PDAC-predisposition genes were rarer. Interestingly, a high frequency of CHEK2 PV was observed in both patient populations. PV in PDAC-predisposition genes were more frequent in patients with (i) multiple primary cancers (12/38; 32%), (ii) relatives with PDAC (15/56; 27%), (iii) relatives with breast/ovarian/colorectal cancer or melanoma (15/86; 17%) but more rare in sporadic PDAC (5/149; 3.4%). PV in homologous recombination genes were associated with improved overall survival (HR = 0.51; 95% CI 0.34–0.77). (4) Conclusions: Our analysis emphasizes the value of multigene panel testing in PDAC patients, especially in individuals with a positive family cancer history, and underlines the importance of population-matched controls for risk assessment.

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