Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice (Dec 2021)

Prevalence of germline TP53 mutation among early onset middle eastern breast cancer patients

  • Abdul Khalid Siraj,
  • Tariq Masoodi,
  • Rong Bu,
  • Sandeep Kumar Parvathareddy,
  • Kaleem Iqbal,
  • Saud Azam,
  • Maha Al-Rasheed,
  • Dahish Ajarim,
  • Asma Tulbah,
  • Fouad Al-Dayel,
  • Khawla Sami Al-Kuraya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13053-021-00206-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background The data on prevalence and clinical relevance of TP53 germline mutations in early onset Middle-Eastern breast cancer (BC) is limited. Methods We determined TP53 germline mutations in a cohort of 464 early onset BC patients from Saudi Arabia using capture sequencing based next generation sequencing. Results Germline TP53 pathogenic mutations were found in 1.5% (7/464) of early onset Saudi BC patients. A total of six pathogenic missense mutations, one stop gain mutation and two variants of uncertain significance (VUS) were detected in our cohort. No TP53 pathogenic mutations were detected among 463 healthy controls. TP53 mutations carriers were significantly more likely to have bilateral breast cancer (p = 0.0008). At median follow-up of 41 months, TP53 mutations were an unfavorable factor for overall survival in univariate analysis. All the patients carrying TP53 mutations were negative for BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations. Majority of patients (85.7%; 6/7) carrying TP53 mutation had no family history suggestive of Li-Fraumeni Syndrome (LFS) or personal history of multiple LFS related tumors. Only one patient had a positive family history suggestive of LFS. Conclusions TP53 germline mutation screening detects a clinically meaningful risk of early onset BC from this ethnicity and should be considered in all early onset BC regardless of the family history of cancer, especially in young patients that are negative for BRCA mutations.

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